BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
[0001] The present invention relates to an optical disc on which an information signal is
recorded, and to a reproduction apparatus for the optical disc. More specifically,
it relates to an optical disc which is used for recording video information which
includes video data, audio data, and image data, and to a reproduction apparatus for
the disc.
2. Description of the Related Art
[0002] Video applications, such as movies, are one kind of application which can be achieved
using optical discs, such as laser discs, and a suitable reproduction device. These
video applications are usually referred to as "video titles".
[0003] As the supply of video titles becomes increasingly internationalized, "multilingual
video titles" are starting to appear on the market. Here, the expression "multilingual"
refers to the user being able to select subtitles for one out of a plurality of languages
which are then reproduced with the moving picture information. As one example, a multilingual
video title aimed at the U.S. and European markets can include separate dubbing soundtracks
and sub-picture information for English subtitles, German subtitles, French subtitles,
and Spanish subtitles, so that users can watch a movie in their specified language.
[0004] One of the technologies which underpins the realization of "multilingual video titles"
is the use of MPEG (Moving Pictures Experts Group) stream data as format for the data
stored on the disc. MPEG streams include video information which has been compressed
at a high compression rate according to MPEG methods, and can also include multiple
sub-picture channels and multiple audio channels which are selectively reproduced.
This is to say, "multilingual video titles" can be achieved by storing the moving
picture information as the video information, dubbing soundtracks for each of the
featured languages as the multiple channels of audio information, and subtitles for
each of the featured languages as the multiple channels of sub-picture information.
[0005] Another of the technologies which underpins the realization of "multilingual video
titles" is the use of a process called OSD (On-Screen Display) processing performed
by the disc reproduction apparatus. Here, OSD processing refers to the decoding of
the image data included as sub-picture information and the mixing of the image data
with the moving picture on the display. This is to say, when the user selects the
language he/she would like reproduced, the disc reproduction apparatus selects and
reproduces the sub-picture information on one of the channels in accordance with the
selected language, with the sub-picture information being reproduced together with
the moving picture. The image data used here for displaying subtitles is known as
"tel-op" data.
[0006] The position at which the sub-picture information is superimposed onto the moving
pictures is decided by the title producer when developing the title. As a result,
during reproduction the sub-picture information can be positioned at the producer's
desired position. Here, should the producer indicate a display command for a coordinate
position around the chest of one of the characters in the main image, the disc reproduction
apparatus may respond to that command by displaying subtitles showing the character's
name which are superimposed over the chest area of the character. Here, when a plurality
of characters are concurrently displayed, the subtitles for characters' names can
be displayed at positions corresponding to the respective characters, making such
subtitles extremely effective.
[0007] Another recent trend in video titles, apart from the development of "multilingual
titles", is the development of "wide-screen TV-adapted titles". Adaptation for wide-screen
television refers to the development of titles which have a high visual impact when
displayed on a wide-screen television with an aspect ratio of 16:9, with the objective
of giving commercially available video titles the same big-screen feeling attained
from watching movies at a movie theater.
[0008] One of the technologies underpinning the adaptation of titles for wide-screen TVs
is, of course, the development of wide-screen TV sets. Wide-screen TV sets have a
screen whose aspect ratio is 16:9 and perform interpolation for a NTSC (National Television
System Committee) signal whose image content has an aspect ratio of 4:3 to display
an image whose aspect ratio is 16:9. This is to say, video information which is stored
on a disc is processed so as to squeeze its image content in the horizontal direction
to enable the information to be optimally displayed at a 16:9 aspect ratio. As described
above, wide-screen TV sets perform interpolation for this video data which has been
squeezed in the horizontal direction and by doing so display the video information
with an aspect ratio of 16:9.
[0009] Another of the technologies underpinning the adaptation of titles for wide-screen
TVs is display mode transformation processing by disc reproduction apparatuses. Here,
display mode transformation processing refers to image interpolation which enables
a video title adapted to a 16:9 aspect ratio to be reproduced by a conventional television
set which has an aspect ratio of 4:3. As described above, video titles which are adapted
to wide-screen TV use are processed so as to give an optimal display when displayed
at an aspect ratio of 16:9. To do so, the video information is shrunk in the horizontal
direction. As a result, conventional TV sets which cannot perform horizontal interpolation
during display end up displaying the image shrunk in the horizontal direction as it
is. In order to perform compensation, display mode transformation processing is executed
by disc reproduction apparatuses, and by switching the display format (display mode)
of the image signal for the main image, the image content can be arranged within the
limited display area of a conventional TV set.
[0010] Here, "pan scan display mode" and "letterbox display mode" are representative examples
of display modes. In the former, pan scan display mode, video which is adapted to
wide-screen television is slid by given distances in the vertical and horizontal directions
in accordance with the FCVO (Frame Center Vertical Offset) and the FCHO (Frame Center
Horizontal Offset) which are standardized under MPEG, before the left and right edges
of the image are trimmed to give an image which will fit onto a TV screen with an
aspect ratio of 4:3. Putting this into other words, pan scan display mode involves
a compensatory cutting of the image content of each frame so that the image can be
displayed on a TV screen with an aspect ratio of 4:3. In the latter, letterbox display
mode, the image recorded with an aspect ratio of 16:9 is reduced and displayed in
the central area of a 4:3 aspect ratio TV screen, with a corrective image being added
above and below the central belt-like area where the image is displayed. Putting this
in other words, letterbox display mode involves a compensatory reduction of the image
content of each frame with an aspect ratio of 16:9 so that the image can be displayed
on a TV screen with an aspect ratio of 4:3.
[0011] When pan scan display mode and letterbox display mode are compared, letterbox display
mode has the distinct merit of being an easier mode to achieve. This is because in
pan scan display mode, the producer must set the FCVO and FCHO values very carefully
for each frame of video, so that unintentional and undesired losses of image data,
such as the trimming of half a character's face, can be avoided.
[0012] Using the letterbox display mode and the pan scan display mode described above, video
information which has been adapted for wide-screen TV can be favorably arranged onto
a conventional TV screen with an aspect ratio of 4:3 However, there remains the problem
for TV sets, disc reproduction apparatuses, and disc that when "multilingual video
titles" which have been developed for wide-screen TV are displayed using the above
modes, the superimposing position of the subtitles cannot always be performed in accordance
with the producer's intentions.
[0013] When a disc reproduction apparatus has a video title adapted for wide-screen TV displayed
on a conventional TV with an aspect ratio of 4:3, conversion to pan scan display mode
is performed as described above, with this changing the position at which the video
content is arranged. As a result, the sub-picture will end up being displaced from
the desired position, which leads to a breakdown in the positional correspondence
between items on the screen and the subtitles related to the items.
[0014] The following is a detailed explanation of the breakdown in the positional relationship
between a sub-picture and actual video footage which will refer to a specific example
of video footage. Here, when editing a video title which is a nature program, the
producer wishes to superimpose subtitles onto a frame introducing bird life. Here,
this one frame of the wide-screen TV-adapted image is as shown by the reference numeral
y101 in Fig. 1A, with reference number y102 showing the subtitles which are to be
superimposed onto the frame. These subtitles are to be superimposed at the feet of
the bird in the image, with the producer indicating that subtitles indicating the
word "Penguin" are to be superimposed at certain coordinates in the wide-screen TV-adapted
image.
[0015] The combined image y103 shows the results of the superimposing of the subtitles y102
on the image y101. Should the producer only see image, he/she should be satisfied
with the results of the superimposing, since in Fig. 1A the subtitles have been superimposed
at the producer's desired position. Here, the results of the same superimposing for
a main image displayed using pan scan mode are shown in Fig. 1B. From Fig. 1B, it
can be clearly seen that the subtitles have been displaced from the intended position,
since the superimposing has been performed with the "Penguin" subtitles at a position
spatially defined with respect to the wide-screen TV-adapted image, despite the fact
that the image has been trimmed to fit the standard TV screen. This is because the
coordinates for superimposing the sub-picture on the main video image in pan scan
display mode are different to the coordinates for superimposing the sub-picture on
the main video image in wide-screen TV-adapted mode. Here, the use of coordinates
for an optimal superimposing position in wide-screen TV-adapted mode when displaying
according to pan scan display mode can often result in the displacement of the display
of the sub-picture.
[0016] Fig. 1C shows the combined image which results from the disc reproduction apparatus
switching to letterbox display mode. As can be seen, the "Penguin" subtitles once
again end up displaced from the intended image content. This leftward displacement
of the superimposing position is caused, as was the case with the displacement in
pan scan display mode, by the use of different coordinate systems. Here, the use of
coordinates for an optimal superimposing position in wide-screen TV-adapted mode when
displaying according to pan scan display mode can often result in the displacement
of the display of the sub-picture.
[0017] As shown in Fig. 1C, the subtitles end up being superimposed onto the border between
the main image and the corrective image, with the top half of the subtitles being
displayed on the main image and the bottom half being displayed on the corrective
image. As shown by the enlargement indicated by the arrow y104, since the subtitles
are displayed in black, the favorable color contrast of the top half of the subtitles
is not achieved in the lower half.
[0018] Since the above displacement is due to the use of different display modes, it is
possible to consider that the superimposing of the sub-picture on the main image would
be better performed at a earlier stage of the process, which is to say before the
conversion to pan scan or letterbox display. An example of when the main image and
the sub-picture are combined before conversion into pan scan display mode is shown
in Fig. 2A, with Fig. 2B showing the case when the main image and the sub-picture
are combined after conversion into letterbox display mode. With the case shown in
Fig. 2A, trimming the image for pan scan display mode results in the loss of the final
two letters of "Penguin", while in Fig. 2B, reduction of the image for letterbox display
mode results in the reduction of the subtitles, so that the "e" and "g" of "Penguin"
and end up appearing as if they have been colored in, making the letters very difficult
to read.
[0019] While combining the main image and sub-picture at an early stage in this way helps
to overcome the problems of displacement, this improvement is surpassed by the loss
of subtitles or by the difficulty of reading reduced characters, so that such methods
cannot be considered practicable.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0020] The primary object of the present invention is to provide a multimedia optical disc
and disc reproduction apparatus which can superimpose subtitles onto a main video
image at the producer's desired position for the display mode which is set for a television
screen.
[0021] This primary object can be achieved by the construction of Claim 1. With the present
construction, the multimedia optical disc stores information for selecting the sub-picture
data in accordance with the present display mode, so that even when a video title
is displayed on a standard TV with an aspect ratio of 4:3 in pan scan or letterbox
mode, the subtitles will be superimposed at a position which is suitable for the present
display mode. By providing an area on a multimedia optical disc for storing information
for selecting sub-picture information in accordance with the display mode, the user
becomes able to select a desired display mode while avoiding displacement of the subtitles
on the television screen. As a result, video titles which are unaffected by display
mode switching operations can be produced.
[0022] The disc can also be constructed according to Claim 2. Here, the superimposing position
of the sub-picture in the coordinate system for wide-screen television display mode
may be set to protrude into the left or right edges of the screen which are trimmed
in pan scan display mode, while the superimposing position of the sub-picture in the
coordinate system for pan scan display mode may be set so that the subtitles do not
protrude into the edges of the screen which are trimmed in pan scan display mode,
and the superimposing position of the sub-picture in the coordinate system for letterbox
display mode may be set so that the subtitles are superimposed over the corrective
image.
[0023] The disc can also be constructed according to Claim 4. Here, the multimedia optical
disc is provided with information for selecting sub-picture data in accordance with
a combination of a type of display mode and a logical channel number set in the disc
reproduction apparatus. As a result, when a video title is reproduced using a television
and the display is switched to pan scan or letterbox display mode, the subtitles can
be displayed at an optimal superimposing position for the present display mode. By
providing an area on a multimedia optical disc for storing information for selecting
sub-picture information in accordance with the display mode and logical channel number,
displacement of the subtitles can be avoided, and the producer can decide the channel
number allocation for different sets of sub-picture data. As a result, video titles
which are unaffected by display mode switching operations can be produced.
[0024] On the other hand, when it is not necessary to take measures against the effects
of display switching operations, a same set of sub-picture data may be commonly used
in plurality of display modes, so that it is not necessary to provide a separate set
of sub-picture data for every display mode in every multiplexed stream in the stream
area. Putting this into other words, the stream area can include sets of sub-picture
data which are unique to one display mode and sets of sub-picture data which are used
in several display modes. Multiplexed streams in which a set of sub-picture data is
used in several display modes have the advantage of being of small data size, so that
such streams will take up of smaller amount of the storage capacity of the multimedia
optical disc.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0025] These and other objects, advantages and features of the invention will become apparent
from the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings
which illustrate a specific embodiment of the invention. In the drawings:
Fig. 1A shows the combining of a wide-screen TV-adapted main image and a sub-picture;
Fig. 1B shows a combining of main image and sub-picture performed in pan scan display
mode;
Fig. 1C shows a combining of main image and sub-picture performed in letterbox display
mode;
Fig. 2A shows a combined image displayed in pan scan display mode when combining is
performed at an early stage;
Fig. 2B shows a combined image displayed in letterbox display mode when combining
is performed at an early stage;
Fig. 3A shows the appearance of the optical disc used in the present embodiment;
Fig. 3B shows a cross-section of the optical disc;
Fig. 3C shows an enlargement of the area around the focused spot of the laser beam;
Fig. 3D shows sequences of pits in the information layer 109;
Fig. 4A shows the track arrangement of the information layer of the optical disc;
Fig. 4B shows the physical sectors of the information layer of the optical disc;
Fig. 5A shows the logical construction of the optical disc;
Fig. 5B shows the basic arrangement of the file layer and the application layer;
Fig. 6 shows an example of internal composition of video title set V1, video title
set V2, and video title set V3;
Fig. 7 shows an example of the group of video materials which are included in video
title set V1;
Fig. 8 shows the internal construction of VOB#1 which is included in the group of
video materials of video title set V1;
Fig. 9 shows the content of VOBU#50 through VOBU#55;
Fig. 10A shows the internal composition of a video pack;
Fig. 10B shows the internal composition of an audio pack;
Fig. 10C shows the internal composition of a sub-picture pack;
Fig. 10D shows the internal composition of a management information pack;
Fig. 11A shows the internal construction of sub-picture unit SP-0.55;
Fig. 11B shows the internal construction of sub-picture unit SP-1.55;
Fig. 11C shows the internal construction of sub-picture unit SP-2.55;
Fig. 11D shows the internal construction of sub-picture unit SP-6.55;
Fig. 11E shows the internal construction of sub-picture unit SP-12.55;
Fig. 11F shows the internal construction of sub-picture unit SP-15.55;
Fig. 12A shows an example of Japanese language subtitles which are used in pan scan
display mode;
Fig. 12B shows an example of Japanese language subtitles which are used in letterbox
display mode;
Fig. 12C shows an example of English language subtitles;
Fig. 13A shows the combining coordinates for subtitles which are used in pan scan
display mode;
Fig. 13B shows the combining coordinates for subtitles which are used in letterbox
display mode;
Fig. 13C shows the combining coordinates for subtitles which are used in wide-screen
TV display mode;
Fig. 14 shows an example of the internal composition of the VTS internal title search
pointer table;
Fig. 15 shows the internal composition of the PGC table in the VTS internal title
set management information;
Fig. 16A shows the format of the PGC information;
Fig. 16B shows the internal composition of the "VOB position information table";
Fig. 17 shows an example of the internal composition of the video manager;
Fig. 18 shows an example of the volume menu;
Fig. 19 shows the viewing environment for a video title in the present embodiment;
Fig. 20 shows the four display types of video titles;
Fig. 21 shows an example key arrangement for the remote controller 91;
Fig. 22A is a block diagram of the internal construction of the DVD player 1 of the
present invention;
Fig. 22B is a block diagram showing the composition of the signal separating unit
86;
Fig. 23 shows the internal construction of the system control unit 93;
Figs. 24A through 24C are flowcharts showing the content of the processing executed
by the system control unit 93;
Figs. 25A and 25B are flowcharts showing the processing in the remote control processing
routine of the system control unit 93;
Fig. 26 is a flowchart showing the processing executed by the sub-picture decoder
88; and
Figs. 27A to 27D show combined images which are used in the four types of viewing
environments.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0026] In order to assist the reader's understanding, the following explanation has been
divided into items which have each been given an index number. Here, the number of
digits in the index number indicates the level of the item in question in the overall
structure of the explanation. Here, the highest-ranked classification numbers are
(1) and (2), with (1) relating to the optical disc and (2) relating to the reproduction
device (disc player).
(1) Physical Construction of the Optical Disc
(1.1) Logical Construction of the Optical Disc
(1.1.1) Logical Construction ... Video Title Set
(1.1.1.1) Video Title Set ... Video Object (VOB)
(1.1.1.1.1) Each kind of pack multiplexed into a Video Object (VOB)
(1.1.1.1.2) Sub-picture unit formed by a Video Object (VOB)
(1.1.1.1.3) Video Object (VOB) - Management Information Pack
(1.1.1.2) Video Title Set - Video Title Set Management Information
(1.1.1.2.1) Video Title Set Management Information - PGC information
(1.1.2) Logical Construction - Video Manager
(2.1) Outline of the Disc Reproduction Device
(2.2) Construction Elements of the Disc Reproduction Device
(2.2.1) Disc Reproduction Device - Construction of Signal Separating Unit 86
(2.2.2) Disc Reproduction Device - Construction of System Control Unit 93
(1) Physical Construction of the Optical Disc
[0027] A digital video disc (DVD) which has a diameter of 120mm and has a storage capacity
of 4.7GB on one side is ideally suited for use as the multimedia optical disc of the
present embodiment.
[0028] Fig. 3A shows the appearance of the optical disc, while Fig. 3B shows its cross-section
and Fig. 3C shows an enlargement of the circled part of Fig. 3B. Starting from the
bottom of this figure, DVD 107 is formed of a first transparent substrate 108, an
information layer 109, a bonding layer 110, a second transparent substrate 111 and
a print layer 112 for printing a label.
[0029] The first transparent substrate 108 and the second transparent substrate 111 are
reinforcing substrates which are made of a same material and are around 0.6mm thick.
This is to say, both substrates are roughly 0.5mm - 0.7mm thick.
[0030] The bonding layer 110 is provided between the information layer 109 and the second
transparent substrate 111 to bond them together.
[0031] The information layer 109 includes a reflective membrane, such as metal foil, which
is attached to the first transparent substrate 108. Here, a high density of indented
and protruding pits is formed in this reflective membrane by a manufacturing process.
[0032] The shape of these pits is shown in Fig. 3D. As shown in Fig. 3D, the length of the
pits varies between 0.4µm and 2.13µm, with the pits being aligned in a spiral with
radial intervals of 0.74µm between them to form one spiral track.
[0033] By shining the laser beam 113 on these pits and measuring the changes in the reflection
ratio of the light spot 114 shown in Fig. 3C, information can be retrieved from the
disc.
[0034] The light spot 114 on a DVD has a diameter of around 1/1.6 times the diameter of
a light spot on a conventional CD due to an increase in the numerical aperture (NA)
of the objective lens and a reduction in the wavelength λ of the laser beam.
[0035] DVDs of the physical construction described above can store around 4.7GB of information
on one side, which is almost eight times the storage capacity of a conventional CD.
As a result, it is possible to achieve a great improvement in picture quality for
moving pictures and to increase the reproduction time from the 74 minutes which is
possible with a video CD to over two hours.
[0036] The substrate technique which has enabled this improvement in storage capacity is
a reduction of the spot diameter D of the laser beam. Here, spot diameter D is given
by the equation "

", so that the spot diameter D can be reduced by reducing the laser wavelength λ and
by increasing the numerical aperture of objective lens NA. It should be noted here
that if the numerical aperture of objective lens NA is increased, comatic aberration
occurs due to the relative inclination, known as "tilt", between the optical axis
of the beam and the disc surface. In order to suppress this phenomenon, DVDs use a
transparent substrate of reduced thickness. Such a reduction in the thickness of the
transparent substrate creates the problem of reduced physical durability for the disc,
although this problem can be overcome by reinforcing DVDs with another substrate.
Data is read from DVDs using an optical system with
[0037] a short wavelength (650nm) red semiconductor laser and an objective lens whose NA
(numerical aperture) can be enlarged up to around 0.6mm. If the thickness of the transparent
substrate is reduced to around 0.6mm, a storage capacity of up to 4.7GB can be achieved
for one side of a 120mm diameter optical disc.
[0038] Fig. 4A shows the arrangement when the spiral track is formed leading from the inner
periphery to the outer periphery of the information layer 109, with a very large number
of physical sectors being formed on this spiral track in the direction for disc rotation.
In the present embodiments, a physical sector is an arc on the spiral track, and is
the smallest unit of data which can be reliably retrieved.
[0039] Each sector has the internal construction shown in Fig. 4B to ensure the reliability
of data retrieval. As shown in Fig. 4B, each sector is made up of a sector header
area which is used to identify the respective sector, a user data area for storing
2Kbytes of data, and an error correction code storage area which stores an error correction
code for the user data area in the same sector. When reading the user data area in
the same sector, a disc reproduction device uses the error correction code to detect
any errors in the sector, and performs error correction when such errors are detected.
(1.1) Logical Construction of the Optical Disc
[0040] The following is an explanation of the logical construction of the optical disc.
This logical construction is made up of a three-layer hierarchy. The hierarchy is
made up of a physical layer whose logical construction is oriented towards the firmware
of the disc reproduction apparatus, a file layer whose logical construction is designed
for the management of a plurality of sectors in file units, and an application layer
which has a multi title logical construction. Here, the logical construction of the
physical layer is shown in Fig. 5A and the logical constructions of the file layer
and the application layer are shown in Fig. 5B.
[0041] The following explanation will first deal with the physical layer whose logical construction
is oriented towards firmware. Here, firmware refers to the control program for controlling
a mechanical construction which includes a spindle motor and an actuator for an optical
pick-up. In order from the top of Fig. 4A, the logical format of the physical layer
is composed of a lead-in area which has identification information included in a sector
address, a volume area and finally a lead-out area, so that on reading such areas,
the firmware has the spindle motor and actuator of the optical pickup activated.
[0042] The lead-in area stores operation stabilization data and the like which is used when
the disc reproduction apparatus starts reading data from the optical disc. The lead-out
area informs the reproduction device of the end of reproduction and does not store
meaningful data.
[0043] The volume area is an area for storing many kinds of data, as well as for managing
the physical sectors to which the volume area belongs as logical blocks. These logical
blocks are identified by firmware using serial numbers which are assigned to consecutive
physical sectors, with the first physical sector in the data recording area being
assigned the number zero. The enlarged portion "b301" of Fig. 5A shows a group of
logical blocks in the volume area. Here, the figures, #m, #m+1, #m+2 and #m+3 which
are appended to the logical blocks in this circled area are the logical block numbers.
[0044] The following is an explanation of the file layer and the application layer. This
file layer and application layer exist in the volume area shown in Fig. 5B.
[0045] The file layer is divided into a volume management area and a file area. The volume
management area stores file system management information which is used to manage
a plurality of logical blocks as files, in accordance with ISO 13346 Standard. The
file system management information shows the relations between the file names for
a plurality of files and addresses of the groups of logical blocks which contain the
corresponding files. This file system management information is used by the disc reproduction
device to access the disc in file units. More specifically, when accessing this area,
the disc reproduction apparatus refers to all the system management information to
calculate all of the groups of logical blocks for the desired file, before accessing
these groups of logical blocks to fetch the desired digital data.
[0046] The following is an explanation of the logical construction of the application layer.
The information in this application layer can be most loosely classified into a Video
Manager and a plurality of Video Title Sets. Here, a Video Title Set is a group of
movie titles which are classified from the viewpoint of common use of a same set of
video material, while the Video Manager is information for managing all of the groups
in the title sets as a single set. In the example shown in Fig. 5B, the grouping of
video materials included in Video Title Set V1 is a collection of images of mammals
and birds shot on location on the Antarctic, while Video Title Set V2 is made up of
images showing historical sites in South-East Asia which have been produced with the
cooperation of the local governments. Using the video materials in Video Title Set
V1, a plurality of video titles, namely "Wildlife in the Antarctic: a Pictorial Documentary",
"Interactive Antarctic Adventure", "A Fairy Tale of the Antarctic", and "Multimedia
Guide to the Wildlife of the Antarctic", can be provided to make full use of valuable
scenes shot on location in the Antarctic.
[0047] Using the video materials included in Video Title Set V2, the title producer can
have the viewer enjoy a documentary about the excavation of historical sites, a multimedia
guide to historical sites, an adventure game where participants search for historical
sites, or a quiz about historical sites around the world. By making good use of the
valuable video materials in this way, the producer can provide a plurality of video
titles to the user.
[0048] By classifying video titles in terms of usage of shared video materials in this way,
it is possible to have a plurality of titles with common video materials grouped together.
(1.1.1) Logical Construction - Video Materials included in a Video Title Set
[0049] Each video title set is made up of video title set management information and a group
of video materials. The following explanation will first deal with the group of video
materials included in a video title set. Normally, when a movie is recorded onto film
or video tape, an editing process is performed whereby only the required scenes are
cut from the master tape and are arranged into the order of the story. When such scenes
are recorded into a Video Title Set, however, no such editing operations are performed.
This is to say, there is no editing process in which only the necessary parts of the
necessary scenes are extracted and arranged into the order of the story. In fact,
a Video Title Set can store video materials in a completely random order without any
extraction of necessary materials from the original footage. The group of video materials
which are stored in Video Title Set V1 are shown in Fig. 7. As shown in this figure,
the Video Title Set V1 of Fig. 7 includes a plurality of video objects (VOBs) which
each have different reproduction times. Here, the expression "VOB" refers to one set
of multiplexed stream data that is made up of various kinds of stream data, such as
video data, audio data, sub-picture data, and control data, which are of variable
code length. Such multiplexed stream data is better known as an MPEG stream, and this
is the unit that is used for recording one scene on a DVD.
[0050] In Fig. 7, VOB#1 has a reproduction time of ten minutes, and is actual footage of
the habitat of the emperor penguin. VOB#2 has a reproduction time of fifty seconds
and is actual footage of an adult and child razorback. VOB#3 has a reproduction time
of eight minutes and is actual footage of the breaking away of the Antarctic ice cap.
VOB#4 has a reproduction time of forty-eight seconds and is actual footage of the
indentation of the Weddell sea. The footage in these VOBs is entirely shot on location
in the Antarctic.
(1.1.1.1) Composition of a Video Object (VOB)
[0051] Fig. 8 shows the internal composition of a VOB. As shown in the drawing, each VOB
is made up of a sequence of a plurality of VOB units (VOBU) which has been arranged
in a time series with the first VOBU to be reproduced at the front. Here, a VOBU is
a multiplexed set of the various kinds of variable code length data, with each of
the multiplexed pieces having a reproduction time between 0.5 and 1.0 seconds. As
examples, VOBU#91 is a collection of the variable code length data which is to be
used for the reproduction for the time period of 00min: 45.50sec to 00min:46.00sec
after the reading of VOB#1 has commenced, while VOBU#147 is a collection of the variable
code length data which is to be used for the reproduction for the time period of 01min:
13.50sec to 01min:14.00sec after the reading of VOB#1 has commenced.
[0052] The "variable code length data" which is described above as being multiplexed into
a VOB can be video data, a plurality of channels of audio data, and a plurality of
channels of sub-picture data, with pieces of such data which are multiplexed into
a VOBU being respectively called video packs, audio packs, and sub-picture packs,
each of which is 2KB in size.
[0053] While the VOB units in each VOB are arranged into a time series, each pack in each
VOB unit is arranged in an order which, with the exception of the provision of the
management information pack at the front, is completely random in terms of number
of packs and pack order. This is to say, there can be VOB units which have the order
audio data, sub-picture data, video data, and other VOB units which have the order,
sub-picture data, video data, audio data. As other examples, there may also be VOB
units which are made up of three hundred or so packs of nothing but video data, and
other VOB unit which are made up of five hundred or so packs.
[0054] Here, the reason the order of the packs can be different for each VOB unit is that
it is not necessary for packs of a same kind to be next to each other when the variable
code length data is fetched and buffered by a reproduction apparatus. The reason why
there can be different numbers of video, audio and sub-picture packs in each VOBU
is that these kinds of data are encoded with a variable coding length, so that there
can be large discrepancies in the amount of data which is necessary to achieve reproduction
for a 0.5 to 1.0 second period.
[0055] To achieve reproduction with the unit time at 0.5 seconds, it is necessary to inform
the disc reproduction apparatus before the start of the 0.5 second period whether
it is sufficient to transfer only a small amount of data, or whether a large amount
of data is required, and to have the decoder provided inside the disc reproduction
apparatus perform decoding for the necessary amount of transferred data. Here, to
have variable code-length data reproduced with a uniform reproduction time of 0.5
seconds, a management information pack is provided at the start of each set of VOB
unit, with this management information pack indicating the transfer rate which is
required for the reproduction of the VOB unit to which it belongs, as well as the
transfer rate and buffer size which are required by each of the video stream, the
audio stream, and the management information stream in the VOB unit. To give a specific
numerical example, 0.5 seconds of video reproduction will generally require several
hundred video packs, with the reproduction device being informed of a necessary transfer
rate in the region of 4.5 Mbit/second before such number of packs are read from the
DVD to enable the decoding of such number of video packs.
[0056] Fig. 9 shows the contents of VOBU#50 through VOBU#55, which are VOB units for the
3.0 second reproduction period from the 25.00 second reproduction mark of VOB#1 to
the 28.00 reproduction mark.
[0057] VOBU#50 is the VOB unit which is used for the reproduction period between the 00hr:00min:25.00sec
and the 00hr:00min:25.50sec marks after the commencement of the reading of VOB#1,
while VOBU#51 is the VOB unit which is used for the reproduction period between the
00hr:00min:25.50sec and the 00hr:00min:26.00sec marks after the commencement of the
reading of VOB#1. In the same way, VOBU#55 is the VOB unit which is used for the reproduction
period between the 00hr:00min:27.50sec and the 00hr:00min:28.00sec marks after the
commencement of the reading of VOB#1.
(1.1.1.1.1) Each kind of pack in a VOB unit (VOBU)
[0058] The following is an explanation of the content each VOBU with reference to Fig. 9.
As shown in the figure, VOB#50, which is reproduced between the 00hr:00min:25.00sec
and the 00hr:00min:25.50sec marks, includes the management information pack "NAVI-50",
the video packs "video50.1" and "video50.2", and the audio packs "audio-0.55", "audio-1.55",
and "audio-3.55".
[0059] The management information pack "NAVI-50" informs the disc reproduction apparatus
of the transfer rate and buffer size which are required by the reproduction of VOBU#50
between the 00hr:00min:25.00sec and the 00hr:00min:25.50sec marks.
[0060] The video packs "video50.1" and "video50.2" are the video packs which are used during
the reproduction of VOBU#50. These video packs are two of the first video packs which
are used, out of the several hundred video packs reproduced during the reproduction
of VOBU#50 between the 00hr:00min:25.00sec and the 00hr:00min:25.50sec marks.
[0061] These video packs, such as "video50.1" and "video50.2", have the standard data format
which is shown in Fig. 10A. The video packs shown in the drawing are made up of a
"pack header", a "packet header", and a "data field" which are standardized according
to MPEG, and are each 2KB in size. The "pack header" includes data called a "pack
start code", a "system clock reference (SCR)", and a "multiplex (MUX) rate" which
is standardized under MPEG, while the "packet header" is made up of a stream ID, a
packet length, an STD (System Target Decoder) buffer scale size, a PTS (Presentation
Time Stamp), and a DTS (Decoding Time Stamp) which are similarly standardized under
MPEG.
[0062] The stream ID in the "packet header" is set at "1110 0000" for a video pack, as shown
below the packet header in Fig. 10A. This information shows that the elementary stream
forming this pack is a video stream.
[0063] The SCR and PTS of a video pack are used for the synchronization of the decoding
process with the decoding processes of audio packs and sub-picture packs. More specifically,
the video decoder of the disc reproduction apparatus is synchronized to a standard
clock based on the SCR, and, having decoded the video data in the data field, waits
for the standard clock to reach the time specified by the PTS. Once this time is reached,
the decoded video data is outputted to a television monitor. By delaying its output
based on the time indicated by the PTS, the video decoder can avoid synchronization
errors with the sub-picture output and the audio output.
[0064] The data field of the video packs stores data which is composed of I-pictures (Intra-Pictures),
P-pictures (Predicative pictures) and B-pictures (Bidirectionally predicative pictures)
which are standardized under MPEG. These, I-pictures, P-pictures, and B-pictures are
obtained by encoding actual video footage. It should be noted here that in the video
packs, "video50.1" and "video50.2", the signal component of the video signal is "squeezed"
before coding is performed. Here, "squeezing" refers to compression of the image content
in the horizontal direction. In this way, the video packs "video50.1", "video 50.2"
represent video which has been adapted to wide-screen TV display mode.
[0065] The audio packs "audio-0.55", "audio-1.55" represent the audio data which is used
when VOBU#55 is reproduced. The reproduction period of VOBU#55 is from 00hr:00min:27.50sec
to 00hr:00min:28.00sec, so that in the present figure, the audio packs for a reproduction
time of 2.5 seconds further forward are stored in VOBU#50. The "0" and "1" used in
the reference numbers of audio packs "audio-0.55" and "audio-1.55" respectively show
that these audio packs are used as the 0
th and the 1
st substreams during the reproduction period of VOBU#55. Under MPEG standards, the "n
th substream" refers to a n
th digital data sequence which is obtained by recombining the multichannel sub-picture
data and audio data for a classification known under MPEG as a "private stream". Here,
a "private stream" is one species of elementary stream, with an elementary stream
being a general name for digital data sequences in which packs belonging to a VOB
are combined according to type. Since it is not possible to make a clear distinction
between audio data and sub-picture data, substreams are provided in the logical construction
of DVDs to clarify the classification of sub-picture data and audio data, so that
by assigning fixed substream IDs to sub-picture data and audio data, these classifications
can be clearly established.
[0066] The audio packs described above share the standard data format which is shown in
Fig. 10B. This format is fundamentally the same as that of a video pack in that it
contains a "pack header", a "packet header", and a "data field". The differences with
a video pack lie in the setting of the stream ID at "1011 1101" in the packet header
and in the setting of the substream ID in the first eight bits in the bits field,
with these being shaded in Fig. 10B. The setting of the stream ID at "1011 1101" in
the stream ID shows that the elementary stream formed by the pack in question is a
private stream.
[0067] As with a video pack, the "pack header" of an audio pack includes data, such as a
pack start code and an SCR which are standardized under MPEG. The "packet header",
meanwhile, stores a stream ID, a packet length, an STD buffer scale size, a PTS, and
a DTS which are standardized under MPEG.
[0068] The SCR and PTS of an audio pack are used for synchronization adjustments with respect
to the decoding of video packs and sub-picture packs. More specifically, the audio
decoder of a disc reproduction apparatus is synchronized to a standard clock based
on the SCR, and, having decoded the audio data in the data field, waits for the standard
clock to reach the time specified by the PTS. Since the decoding of audio data has
a much lighter load than the decoding of video data or sub-picture data, the output
delay for audio data is somewhat longer than those of video data and sub-picture data.
Once the time indicated by the PTS has been reached, the audio decoder outputs result
of the decoding to a speaker. By delaying its output based on the time indicated by
the PTS, the audio decoder can avoid synchronization errors with the sub-picture output
and the video output.
[0069] The "data field" of an audio pack stores digital audio according to Linear PGM or
Dolby AC-3 methods.
[0070] For the example shown in Fig. 9, the audio packs used in VOBU#55 are stored in VOBU#50.
This is possible because the disc reproduction apparatus can know from the PTS at
what time audio data is to be reproduced. As a result, audio packs may be stored in
VOBUs whose reproduction times are well in advance of a present VOBU without causing
any operational problems.
[0071] The following is an explanation of the internal composition of VOBU#51 shown in Fig.
9. As shown in Fig. 9, VOBU#51, which is reproduced between the 00hr:00min:25.50sec
and the 00hr:00min:26.00sec marks, includes the management information pack "NAVI-51",
the video packs "video51.1" and "video51.2", and the sub-picture packs "SP-0.55.1",
"SP-1.55.1", "SP-2.55.1", and "SP-15.55.1".
[0072] The management information pack "NAVI-51" informs the disc reproduction apparatus
of the transfer rate and buffer size which are required by the reproduction of VOBU#51
between the 00hr:00min:25.50sec and the 00hr:00min:26.00sec marks.
[0073] The sub-picture pack "SP-0.55.1" represents the sub-picture data which is used when
VOBU#55, whose reproduction period is from 00hr:00min:27.50sec to 00hr:00min:28.00sec,
is reproduced. The numeral "55" in the reference number "SP-0.55.1" shows that the
present sub-picture pack is one of the sub-picture units which is used during the
reproduction of VOBU#55. This means that packs for a reproduction time of 2.0 seconds
further forward are stored in VOBU#51. Here, a sub-picture unit is the smallest unit
of sub-picture information which is can be subjected to OSD processing by the disc
reproduction apparatus, and includes display commands and image data which is encoded
according to run-length encoding.
[0074] The "1" in the reference number "SP-0.55.1" is a serial unit number which is allocated
to the sub-picture pack. Here, serial unit numbers are serial numbers which are assigned
to a plurality of sub-picture packs which compose one sub-picture unit, so that the
setting of "1" in sub-picture pack "SP-0.55.1" shows that this sub-picture pack is
the first compositional element in the sub-picture unit for the reproduction time
of "VOBU#55".
[0075] The number "0" in the reference number "SP-0.55.1" shows the substream ID of the
present sub-picture pack. Here, a substream ID is an identifier showing to which of
the 32 sub-picture substreams the present sub-picture pack belongs. Naturally, the
setting "0" for the present sub-picture pack indicates that the present sub-picture
pack is an element of the sub-picture unit which is used as 0
th sub-picture substream.
[0076] In addition to "SP-0.55.1", the sub-picture packs "SP-0.55.2", "SP-0.55.3", "SP-0.55.4",
and "SP-0.55.5" are also present as sub-picture packs which form the sub-picture unit
for the 0
th substream for the reproduction time of VOBU#55 between the 00hr:00min:27.50sec and
00hr:00min:28.00sec marks. These show the second, third, fourth, and fifth sub-picture
packs which form the sub-picture unit for the 0
th substream at the reproduction time of VOBU#55. Putting this another way, the sub-picture
unit for the 0
th substream which is used at the reproduction time of VOBU#55 is divided into five
VOB units (VOBU#51 through VOBU#55) when recorded onto an optical disc. Here, the
reason the sub-picture units used at a given reproduction time are distributed among
preceding VOB units is that the image data which forms the major element of the sub-picture
unit is of a large data size, so that if such data were to be read during the reproduction
time of VOBU#55 between the 00hr:00min:27.50sec and 00hr:00min:28.00sec marks, it
would be necessary for the disc reproduction apparatus to read a large amount of data
in a short period of time, which carries the risk of breakdown in the reading process.
With this in mind, the sub-picture packs which form a sub-picture unit are distributed
among a plurality of VOBUs to prevent the reading processes of the disc reproduction
apparatus being concentrated at the reproduction time of data.
[0077] In the same way, the sub-picture packs "SP-1.55.1", "SP-1.55.2", "SP-1.55.3", "SP-1.55.4",
and "SP-1.55.5" are the sub-picture packs which form the sub-picture unit for the
1
st substream for the reproduction time of VOBU#55. These show the first, second, third,
fourth, and fifth sub-picture packs which form the sub-picture unit for the 1
st substream at the reproduction time of VOBU#55. From this, it can be seen that the
sub-picture unit for the 1
st substream which is used at the reproduction time of VOBU#55 is divided into five
VOB units (VOBU#51 through VOBU#55) when recorded onto an optical disc.
[0078] The sub-picture packs "SP-2.55.1", "SP-2.55.2", "SP-2.55.3", "SP-2.55.4", and "SP-2.55.5"
are the sub-picture packs which form the sub-picture unit for the 2
nd substream for the reproduction time of VOBU#55. These show the first, second, third,
fourth, and fifth sub-picture packs which form the sub-picture unit for the 2
nd substream at the reproduction time of VOBU#55. From this, it can be seen that the
sub-picture unit for the 2
nd substream which is used at the reproduction time of VOBU#55 is divided into five
VOB units (VOBU#51 through VOBU#55) when recorded onto an optical disc.
[0079] As described above, the sub-picture units for VOBU#55 further include a 6
th, a 12
th and a 15
th substreams. Although not shown in the drawing, they are also divided into sub-picture
packs which are distributed among a plurality of VOBUs which precede VOBU#55 in the
time series.
[0080] The sub-picture packs introduced here share the standard format which is shown in
Fig. 10C. As can be seen by comparing the formats shown in Figs. 10B and 10C, the
data construction of a sub-picture pack is fundamentally the same as that of an audio
pack, with it comprising a "pack header", a "packet header", and a "data field", as
well as having a eight-bit substream ID at the front of the data field.
[0081] As with an audio pack, the "pack header" includes a pack start code and an SCR which
are standardized under MPEG. The "packet header" includes a stream ID, a packet length,
an STD buffer scale size, an SCR, and a PTS, which are similarly standardized under
MPEG.
[0082] The SCR and PTS of a sub-picture pack are used for synchronization adjustments with
respect to the decoding of video packs and audio packs. More specifically, the sub-picture
decoder of a disc reproduction apparatus is synchronized to a standard clock based
on the SCR, and, having decoded the audio data in the data field, waits for the standard
clock to reach the time specified by the PTS. The decoder waits for such time because
of the large discrepancies in the processing loads of the decoding process for run-length
encoded sub-picture data, the decoding process for the video data which requires internal
frame decoding/internal field decoding and other movement compensating prediction,
and the decoding process for audio data. Also, while the decoding of video data is
necessary for each GOP (Group of Pictures), the decoding of subtitles need only be
performed at intervals of several seconds. When the time indicated by the SCR is reached,
the sub-picture decoder outputs the decoded sub-picture signal to the TV monitor.
By delaying its output based on the time indicated by the PTS, the sub-picture decoder
can avoid synchronization errors with the audio output and the video output.
[0083] As with an audio pack, the stream ID of the "packet header" of a management information
pack is set at "1011 1101" indicating a private stream, although the substream ID
in the data field is set a different value. The most significant three bits of the
substream ID in a management information pack are set at "001", with this being shaded
in Fig. 10C. The least significant five bits of the substream ID are used for an identification
code which indicates one of the sub-picture substreams #0∼#31.
(1.1.1.1.2) Video Object - Internal Composition of a Sub-Picture Unit
[0084] Fig. 11A shows the composition of sub-picture unit 0.55 in the 0
th substream for the reproduction time of 00hr:00min:27.50sec to 00hr:00min:28.00sec
which is composed of the sub-picture packs 0.55.1 to 0.55.5.
[0085] The sub-picture unit in the present figure includes the code sequence "RLE code sequence
f1" that is obtained by subjecting image data to run-length encoding and a display
command "(Xp1, Yp1), Widthp1 Heightp1" that informs the disc reproduction apparatus
of the area on the TV screen in which RLE code sequence f1 should be displayed. Fig.
12A shows an example of the image data which represents the Japanese word

meaning "penguin". The "p" in "(Xp1, Yp1)" indicates that pan scan display mode is
operational, so that sub-picture unit SP-0.55 includes a display command for optimizing
the coordinates of the code sequence "RLE code sequence f1" in pan scan display mode.
Here, Widthp1 shows the horizontal extent of the image data of Fig. 12A, while Heightp1
shows its vertical extent. Fig. 13A shows the area indicated by (Xp1, Yp1) to (Xp2,
Yp2) in the frame displayed using VOBU#55. In this drawing, the area corresponding
to (Xp1, Yp1) to (Xp2, Yp2) in the main image is colored black to prepare it for the
superimposing of image data.
[0086] In the coordinate system for pan scan display mode, the area (Xp1, Yp1) to (Xp2,
Yp2) has the superimposing position shifted slightly to the left so that the character
row does not protrude into the area of the image which is trimmed. By shifting the
superimposing coordinates slightly to the left, the producer is able to prevent the
sub-picture protruding into the trimmed region.
[0087] Fig. 11B shows the composition of the sub-picture unit 1.55 of the 1
st substream which is composed of sub-picture packs 1.55.1 to 1.55.5 for the reproduction
time of 00hr:00min:27.50sec to 00hr:00min:26.00sec.
[0088] As shown in Fig. 11B, the sub-picture units include the code sequence "RLE code sequence
f11" which is obtained by subjecting the image data shown in Fig. 12B to run-length
encoding. The difference between the image data of Fig. 12A and that of Fig. 12B is
that a larger point setting of wider-spaced font is used in the latter.
[0089] The sub-picture unit SP-1.55 includes a display command for optimizing the display
coordinates of code sequence "RLE code sequence f11" in letterbox display mode, with
this command being "(Xb1, yb1)∼(xb2, Yb2), Widthb1, Heightb1". The "b" in "(Xbn, Ybn)"
is indicative of letterbox display mode, while "Widthb1" and "Heightb1" respectively
express the horizontal and vertical extent of the image data of Fig. 12B in letterbox
display mode. Fig. 13B shows the area on the display which is indicated by the coordinates
(Xb1, Yb1)∼(Xb2, Yb2) for the one frame image which is displayed for VOBU#55. Here,
RLE code sequence f11 has its image data displayed on an area which has been colored
white on top of the black corrective image. By having the superimposing position of
the RLE code sequence f11 determined in this command, the producer can have the sub-picture
displayed at a position which does not coincide with the main image in letterbox display
mode.
[0090] Fig. 11C shows the composition of the sub-picture unit 2.55 of the 2
st substream which is composed of sub-picture packs 2.55.1 to 2.55.5 for the reproduction
time of 00hr:00min:27.50sec to 00hr:00min:28.00sec.
[0091] In this drawing, the code sequence "RLE code sequence f11" is obtained by subjecting
the image data shown in Fig. 12A for the same subtitles as the sub-picture unit of
the 0
th elementary stream to run-length encoding. The display command "(Xw1, Yw1)∼(Xw2, Yw2)
Widthw1, Heightw1" in this drawing informs a disc reproduction apparatus of the area
on the TV screen where the code sequence "RLE code sequence f11" is to be superimposed.
Here, (Xw1, Yw1) are the coordinates in wide-screen TV display mode for the standard
position of the image data, with the "w" in "Xwn, Ywn" indicating that the coordinates
are for wide-screen TV display mode. As before, "Widthw1" and "Heightw1" respectively
express the horizontal and vertical extent of the image data of Fig. 12A in wide-screen
TV display mode. Fig. 13C shows the area on the display which is indicated by the
coordinates (Xw1, Yw1)∼(Xw2, Yw2) for the one frame image which is displayed for VOBU#55.
Here, RLE code sequence f11 has its image data displayed in the indicated area which
is first colored black. It can be seen from Fig. 13C that the superimposing position
in wide-screen TV display mode protrudes rightward into the area which would be trimmed
in pan scan display mode. In this way, the present sub-picture unit is able to arrange
the subtitles so as to make the most of the extended width of the screen in wide-screen
TV display mode.
[0092] From the above description, it can be seen that the sub-picture units for the 0
th, 1
st, and 2
nd substreams which are set the reproduction time of VOBU#55 all include Japanese language
subtitles which can be superimposed onto the main image at an optimal position for
any of pan scan, letterbox, or wide-screen TV display modes.
[0093] Figs. 11D, 11E, and 11F show the compositions of the sub-picture units of the 6
th, 12
th, and 15
th substreams which are each composed of sub-picture packs n.55.1 to n.55.5 (n being
6, 12, or 15) for the reproduction time of 00hr:00min:27.50sec to 00hr:00min:28.00sec.
[0094] The sub-picture units in the present figures include the code sequence "RLE code
sequence f2" which is obtained by subjecting image data the image data shown in Fig.
12C to run-length encoding. As shown in Fig. 12C, this image data is for the English
subtitles "Penguin". In Fig. 11D, the coordinates (Xp3, Yp3)∼(Xp4, Yp4) indicate the
superimposing position for the English subtitles "Penguin" in pan scan display mode,
while in Fig. 11E, the coordinates (Xb3, Yb3)∼(Xb4, Yb4) indicate the superimposing
position for the English subtitles "Penguin" in letterbox display mode, and in Fig.
11F, the coordinates (Xw3, Yw3)∼(Xw4, Yw4) indicate the superimposing position for
the English subtitles "Penguin" in wide-screen TV display mode.
[0095] From the above description, it can be seen that the sub-picture units for the 6
th, 12
th, and 15
th substreams which are set the reproduction time of VOBU#55 all include English language
subtitles which can be superimposed onto a main image at an optimal position for any
of pan scan, letterbox, or wide-screen TV display modes.
[0096] As can be seen from the above description, VOB#55 uses six substreams to optimize
the superimposing position, font and character pitch in each of the three display
modes. It should be especially noted here that VOB#1 which includes the VOB unit which
is designed to display subtitles at the feet of the penguin shown in the main image
is an exceptional video object, with the vast majority of VOBs included in the video
materials having only one or two sub-picture substreams. This is because the majority
of VOBs will use a same superimposing position, font, and character pitch in all three
display modes which are namely, pan scan display mode, letterbox display mode, and
wide-screen TV display mode.
[0097] On the other hand, there can of course be VOBs which have as many as fifteen substreams.
These are VOBs which include subtitles for five languages in the three display modes.
[0098] The number of substreams provided in each VOB does not need to be equal and consists
of a smallest necessary number in the range of one to thirty-two. By only multiplexing
substreams where necessary, the data size of VOBs can be reduced, which leads to more
efficient use of the storage capacity of discs.
1.1.1.1.3) Video Object (VOB) - Management Information Pack
[0099] As described above, the management information packs "NAVI-50", "NAVI-51", and "NAVI-52"
shown in Fig. 9 are arranged at the front of each VOBU and are used to indicate the
required transfer rate. Since a management information pack is stored at the front
of each VOB unit, each management information pack is only opened in a buffer in the
disc reproduction apparatus for the 0.5 seconds while the video packs, audio packs,
and sub-picture packs in the first VOB unit are read and reproduced, before the management
information pack in the next VOB unit is read. Once this 0.5 second period has expired,
the next management information pack is overwritten into the buffer. Since each management
information pack is only opened in the buffer during the reading of the video, audio,
and sub-picture packs in the same VOB unit, in addition to the transfer rate, control
information which only applies to the present VOB unit can be indicated to the disc
reproduction apparatus for only the 0.5 - 1.0 second period for which the video, audio,
and sub-picture packs in the present VOB unit are reproduced.
[0100] Fig. 9 shows the data construction of the management information packs "NAVI-50",
"NAVI-51", and "NAVI-52". While the video packs, audio packs, and sub-picture packs
are each formed of one packet, the management information packs are each formed of
two packets. Of these, one packet is called a PCI packet (Presentation Control Information
packet) while the other packet is called a DSI packet (Data Search Information packet).
The data construction of a management information pack is somewhat different to that
of a video packet or an audio packet in that it is made up of a "pack header", a "system
header", a "packet header for PCI packet", a "data field for PCI packet", a "packet
header for DSI packet" and a "data field for DSI packet".
[0101] The system header stores management information for the entire VOB unit which has
this management information pack at the front, in accordance with MPEG standards.
It stores the overall necessary transfer rate and an indication of a transfer rate
and buffer size for each of the video stream, the audio stream, and the sub-picture
stream.
[0102] The stream IDs of the two packet headers in a management information pack, as shown
by the oblique shading in Fig. 9, are both set the identification code "1011 1111"
which indicates "private stream 2".
[0103] The PCI packet contains the Highlight Information which is used to perform reproduction
control in accordance with cursor operations for menus and confirmation operations
for items, when the sub-picture pack is used to display a menu made up of a plurality
of items. In the present embodiment, the Highlight Information includes color information
for the colors to be used in the sub-picture display, as well as reproduction control
information for reproduction control to be performed in response to confirmation operations.
[0104] A representative example of such "reproduction control in response to a confirmation
operation" is a branch which switches reproduction from a present reproduction route
to another reproduction route. Here, switching of reproduction route is performed
by having commands, named "Highlight commands", stored in the Highlight information
corresponding to each item in a menu, and by having these commands executed when the
management information pack is read by the disc reproduction apparatus. Since these
commands which correspond to each item, which in turn correspond to a confirmation
operation, are executed selectively, reproduction routes can be switched in units
of one set of PGC information. PGC information is described in more detail Later in
this specification.
[0105] A DSI packet stores information which is necessary for the reproduction of an MPEG
stream from the present data position. Each DSI packet also stores the addresses of
the preceding and succeeding DSI packets, which are referred to when special reproduction
functions, such as fast forward, are performed.
[0106] This concludes the explanation of video objects (VOB), so that the following explanation
will deal with the composition of the Video Title Set management information in the
Video Title Set.
(1.1.1.2) Video Title Set - Video Title Set Management Information
[0107] The Video Title Set management information is a collection of control information
for reproducing video materials, which have not been subjected to any editing processes
and have not been arranged in order of reproduction, so that they compose one video
title.
[0108] In the present embodiment, a video title is an image production that is expressed
using (1) a Video Title Set number which is uniquely assigned to the title on the
optical disc, (2) one or more sets of PGC information which show the route taken by
the optical pickup in reading the optical disc, and (3) video information which is
successively read from the optical disc in accordance with the PGC information. These
kinds of information are managed by the Video Title Set (VTS) management information
in each Video Title Set. An example of such Video Title Set management information
is shown in Fig. 6. As shown in Fig. 6, this Video Title Set management information
is composed of a "VTS internal title search pointer table", a "PGC table", and "VTS
internal aspect ratio information".
[0109] The "aspect ratio information" informs the disc reproduction apparatus whether the
group of video materials in the video title set are to be subjected to wide-screen
display processing before display. As described above, the video content of the group
of video materials in video title set V1 is squeezed before recording into VOBs, so
that in view of this squeezed state of the video content, the aspect ratio information
of the video title set V1 is set at "11bit", indicating the performance of wide-screen
display processing to the disc reproduction apparatus. By looking at the aspect ratio
information of the other video title sets in the present figure, it can be seen that
"11bit" is also set for video title set V2, while "00bit" is set for video title set
V3. Here, the setting "00bit" indicates to the disc reproduction apparatus that wide-screen
display processing is not to be performed for the set of video materials included
in video title set V3.
[0110] The "PGC table" stores a plurality of sets of PGC information. As described above,
VOBs store images which have not been edited or arranged into reproduction order,
so that it is necessary to provide disc reproduction apparatuses with information
showing how the video information is to be reproduced. This information is provided
by the sets of PGC information which are stored in the PGC table, as shown in Fig.
6. In order to arrange the video materials to create a scenario, each set of PGC information
specifies a retrieval order of VOBs and various supplementary control indications
for the disc reproduction apparatus to be executed during the reproduction of the
indicated VOBs. Examples of such supplementary control are control for the mapping
of substreams for the pairing of the logical channel number and the display mode,
or control to have branches performed between sets of PGC information.
[0111] The VOB reproduction orders in the various sets of PGC information in the PGC table
are expressed as lists of VOB position information. Here, the lists of position information
included in sets of PGC information are interpreted by a disc reproduction apparatus
as retrieval orders for VOBs. In Fig. 8, the sets of PGC information each have their
own retrieval order of VOBs, which shows that a plurality of video titles with different
reproduction orders are prepared by rearranging the order of the VOB position information
in the different sets of PGC information. Putting this into other words, multiple
scenarios are created using different arrangements of the same scenes.
[0112] Of special note here is that sets of PGC information in the PGC table include link
information for branches to other sets of PGC information, and that these links can
be branch links in which a plurality of sets of PGC information are linked to the
present set of PGC information. For branch links, the branch destination is decided
according to a user operation during reproduction. Here, management information for
managing all of the PGC information and information which is only valid for the PGC
being reproduced are also stored in the PGC table, with an example of such being a
color conversion table which is used for the sub-picture throughout the entire reproduction
period. This PGC management information is not related to the gist of the present
invention, and so will not be described in detail. Instead, it should be noted that
the sets of PGC information are provided for the retrieval of VOBs and for the definition
of supplementary control, with different sets of PGC information being used in the
different scenarios for each video title. Since PGC information is used to describe
scenarios, it is also known as "scenario information".
[0113] The "Video Title Set (VTS) internal title search pointer table is a table which is
composed of title numbers, and pointers to sets of PGC information which correspond
to VTS title search pointer #1, VTS title search pointer #2, VTS title search pointer
#3, etc. It is a table used for referencing the sets of PGC information stored in
the PGC management information table using a VTS internal title number. Here, a VTS
internal title number is a locale number for managing separate titles in the Video
Title Set.
[0114] Fig. 14 shows an example of the content of the VTS internal title search pointer
table. As shown in this figure, the VTS internal title search pointers #1, #2, and
#3 are respectively made up of a Video Title Set number and VTS internal title number
(this pairing corresponding to the title number assigned to one of titles), and a
number (PGC number) of a set of corresponding PGC information. The sets of PGC information
which are linked to the VTS internal title numbers in VTS internal title search pointers
#1, #2, and #3, are sets of PGC information which are specified by a selection operation
made by the user. These sets of PGC information are somewhat exceptional when compared
to other PGCs, which are stored without information showing the origins of branches,
in that they are specified by a clear operation made by the user after referring to
the available title names. As a result, these sets of PGC information are appended
with the label "Entry-PGC" to distinguish them from other sets of PGC information.
(1.1.1.2.1 Video Title Set Management Information -PGC Information
[0115] The following is an explanation of the data construction of the sets of PGC information.
Here, Fig. 16A shows the logical format of PGC information #1, #2, #3 ... #6 in the
PGC table, while Fig. 15 shows an example of the kind of values which are set within
this logical format.
[0116] As shown in Fig. 16A, each set of PGC information is made up of "PGC link information",
"sub-picture mapping information", and a "VOB position information table".
[0117] The VOB position information table uses sequences of VOB position information to
indicate to the disc reproduction apparatus what VOBs should be read in what order
for the present set of PGC information. Each set of VOB position information informs
the disc reproduction apparatus of the storage position of each VOB on the optical
disc, so that the disc reproduction apparatus can have the optical pickup scan that
storage position. The content of the set of VOB position information are shown in
Fig. 16B. As shown in Fig. 16B, each set of VOB position information in the present
embodiment is expressed as a "VOB reproduction time", a "VOB offset", and a "No. of
blocks in VOB". When reading a VOB, the disc reproduction apparatus uses the offset
numbers included in the VOB position information and calculates the logical block
numbers of the logical blocks in which the VOB is stored, before having the optical
pickup scan only the number of logical blocks indicated by the "No. of blocks" on
the track of the optical disc.
[0118] The PGC link information is information which shows what reproduction route continues
after the present logical block. To do so, it stores link destination information
which shows what set of PGC information should be next read into the buffer. When
the reproduction according to one set of PGC information is completed by the disc
reproduction apparatus, the next set of PGC information is determined in accordance
with the "PGC link information", and this next set of PGC information is read from
the disc and overwritten into the buffer. In this way, the PGC information is updated
and reproduction control can continue in accordance with the reproduction route indicated
by this updated set of PGC information. Here, for the example shown in Fig. 15, the
link destination "PGC information#2" is given for PGC information#1, while the link
destination "PGC information#3" is given for PGC information#2, and the link destination
"PGC information#4" is given for PGC information#3. As a result, the disc reproduction
apparatus can perform reproduction control according to PGC information#2 having completed
the reproduction control in accordance with PGC information#1, with PGC information#3
and #4 following on after this.
[0119] The sub-picture mapping information is information which indicates to the disc reproduction
apparatus the sub-picture substreams which can be used when performing reproduction
control according to the PGC information and their selection conditions. The selection
conditions of each substream are made up of logical channel numbers and display mode
information.
[0120] Logical channel numbers are classification numbers which are assigned to substream
IDs for the management of the display content of each substream. As one example, the
classifications referred to here can be English subtitles, Japanese subtitles, and
the like.
[0121] Display mode information is information which shows what processing should be performed
by the disc reproduction apparatus for each frame of video information when the main
image data is displayed in each of the different display modes for the different aspect
ratios.
[0122] The following is an explanation of a specific example composition of a substream
using the logical channel numbers and the display mode information. This example is
shown in Fig. 15. In Fig. 15, the substream ID expressed as "0010 0001" in binary
is the substream ID assigned to the 1
st sub-picture substream. The information "CH0" and "aspect ratio 4:3 letterbox" are
given to the left of this substream ID, with this line of information telling the
disc reproduction apparatus to decode the sub-picture unit with the substream ID "0100
0001" when the logical channel number in the disc reproduction apparatus is CH0 and
the display mode is "aspect ratio 4:3 letterbox". The line of information written
as "CH0", "aspect ratio 4:3 pan scan", "0100 0000", tells the disc reproduction apparatus
to decode the sub-picture unit with the substream ID "0100 0000" when the logical
channel number in the disc reproduction apparatus is CH0 and the display mode is aspect
ratio 4:3 pan scan.
[0123] In more detail, the information "aspect ratio 4:3 standard" shows that the viewer
wishes to view an image title which has not been adapted for use on a wide-screen
TV on a conventional TV screen with an aspect ratio of 4:3. In the same way, the information
"aspect ratio 16:9 standard" shows that the viewer wishes to view an image title which
has been adapted for use on a wide-screen TV on such a wide-screen TV screen with
an aspect ratio of 16:9. The information "aspect ratio 4:3 pan scan" shows that the
viewer wishes to view an image title which has been adapted for use on a wide-screen
TV on a conventional TV screen with an aspect ratio of 4:3 using a setting of pan
scan display mode. Finally, the information "aspect ratio 4:3 letterbox" shows that
the viewer wishes to view an image title which has been adapted for use on a wide-screen
TV on a conventional TV screen with an aspect ratio of 4:3 using a setting of letterbox
display mode.
[0124] In Fig. 15, PGC information #1 which defines the retrieval of VOB#1 has the 0
th, 1
st, 2
nd, 6
th, 12
th, and 15
th sub-picture substream IDs set in the sub-picture mapping information. Since the 0
th, 1
st, 2
nd, 6
th, 12
th, and 15
th sub-picture units in VOB#1 have their own respective superimposing positions for
the different languages and display modes, the disc reproduction apparatus can superimpose
the sub-picture at an optimal position for the display mode which is set for the TV
screen in use.
[0125] PGC information #2 which defines the retrieval of VOB#2, on the other hand, only
has the 0
th and 15
th sub-picture substream IDs set in the sub-picture mapping information. This is because
although VOB#5 assigns a substream to each logical channel number, the substreams
for all three display modes use the same substream. Accordingly, for the period when
PGC information #2 is valid, the disc reproduction apparatus may select either of
the 0
th and 15
th sub-picture units in accordance with the value of the logical channel number. It
is also possible here for other information to be included in the sets of PGC information,
with a representative example of such being the "PGC command table".
[0126] The "PGC command table" is a table which stores various commands, such as conditional
branch commands which are appended to the "VOB position information table". The disc
reproduction apparatus executes the commands which are written here before and after
the retrieval of VOBs based on the "VOB position information table", so that more
dynamic switching of reproduction routes can be achieved. The conditional branch commands
in the present table are expressed as comparisons to see whether the values of general
registers and immediate values are equal or higher/lower, with the branch destinations
being expressed as PGC numbers. Here, general registers are registers for storing
values in accordance with operations made by the user during reproduction, and are
used to inform the disc reproduction apparatus of user operations which have been
made using a remote controller or a control panel. Branches which are performed in
interactive software are performed using these conditional branches which indicate
sets of PGC information as their branch destinations.
(1.1.2) Logical Construction-Video Manager
[0127] The Video Manager is made up of VTS internal title search pointers, video objects,
and sets of PGC information, with it being possible for its data construction to be
standardized to that of the Video Title Set (although it should be obvious that it
is far more simplified than that of the Video Title Set). The difference between the
VOBs for the Video Manager and the VOBs for the Video Title Set lies in the fact that
the Video Manager is used exclusively for reproducing the volume menu. Here, the expression
"volume menu" refers to a menu in which all of the titles stored on the optical disc
are recorded, so that the user can select one of the titles when the volume menu is
displayed. When an optical disc is loaded into the disc reproduction apparatus, this
volume menu is displayed on the screen immediately after the optical pickup has moved
from the volume management area to the file area.
[0128] Since the Video Manager is only used for the volume menu, there are the following
two differences between the Video Manager and the Video Title Set. Firstly, while
the VOBs in the Video Title Set include video data for actual footage, sub-picture
data and audio data, the VOBs in the Video Manager only contain a video pack, a sub-picture
pack and a management information pack for a background image for a menu. Secondly,
the branch destinations of the branch commands in the PGC information and the management
information of the Video Title Set, with certain exceptions, do not exceed the range
of the Video Title Set, while the branch commands in the Video Manager have branch
addresses for titles in a variety of Video Title Sets on the optical disc, so that
they can cross over between Video Title Sets.
[0129] The most significant characteristic of the Video Manager is that it is loaded into
a memory provided in the disc reproduction apparatus for the duration that the optical
disc is loaded in the disc reproduction apparatus. By having the Video Manager stored
in memory in this way, the disc reproduction apparatus can refer to the content of
the Video Manager without performing a disc access operation.
[0130] Fig. 17 shows the data construction of the Video Manager. As shown in this figure,
the Video Manager is composed of "VOBs for menu", "PGC for menu", and a "VM internal
title search pointer table".
[0131] The "VOBs for menu" are VOBs which are specially used for the volume menu. As their
name suggests, they include the sub-picture pack for displaying the volume menu and
the management information pack for performing reproduction control in accordance
with cursor operations and confirmation operations. The display image for a volume
menu is shown in Fig. 18. The VOB for the volume menu includes a sub-picture pack
in which character strings showing the titles have been subjected to run-length encoding,
the titles including "1:Wildlife in the Antarctic: A Pictorial Documentary", "2: Interactive
Antarctic Adventure", "3: A Fairy Tale of the Antarctic", "4:Multimedia Guide to the
Wildlife of the Antarctic", and "5:Exploring the Historic Sites of South-East Asia".
The user selects one of these title name character strings and performs a confirmation
operation to indicate the title to be reproduced. Here, the management information
pack in the same VOB includes a same number of sets of item information as there are
titles. These sets of item information store a "Title Play" command which indicates
a branch to each title number and a "palette conversion range" which shows the area
on the display whose color will change when the corresponding item is in the selection
condition.
[0132] The set of "PGC for menu" information is a set of PGC information which is exclusively
used for the volume menu, and stores the recording position of the corresponding menu
VOB so that the menu VOB can be read when the optical disc is loaded into the disc
reproduction apparatus. This set of PGC information is read by the disc reproduction
apparatus immediately after the disc has been loaded in the disc reproduction apparatus
and the optical pickup has moved from the volume management area to the file area,
and is used to guide the optical pickup so as to read the VOB for menu. In this way,
the volume menu can quickly be displayed on the screen.
[0133] The VM internal title search pointer table is made up of a plurality of VM internal
title search pointers #1 ... #69 which each correspond to a title number. In this
figure, the VM internal title search pointer #1 corresponds to title number 1, with
VM internal title search pointers #2 and #3 respectively corresponding to title numbers
2 and 3.
[0134] VM internal title search pointer #1 includes a pairing of a Video Title Set number
and a VTS internal title number.
[0135] "Title No. 1" assigned to the video title "1:Wildlife in the Antarctic: A Pictorial
Documentary" corresponds to the VM internal title search pointer #1. In Fig. 17, the
VM internal title search pointer #1 includes the VTS number indicating VTS V1 and
the first VTS internal title number. In the title search pointer #1 in VTS V1 shown
in Fig. 14, the VTS internal title number is linked to PGC information #5, showing
that when the viewer selects the video title "1:Wildlife in the Antarctic: A Pictorial
Documentary", the retrieval order of VOBs is given by PGC information #5 in VTS V1.
[0136] In the same way, "Title No. 3" assigned to the video title "3: A Fairy Tale of the
Antarctic" corresponds to the VM internal title search pointer #3. In Fig. 17, the
VM internal title search pointer #3 includes the VTS number indicating VTS V1 and
the third VTS internal title number. In the title search pointer #3 in VTS V1 shown
in Fig. 14, the VTS internal title number is linked to PGC information #1, showing
that when the viewer selects the video title "3: A Fairy Tale of the Antarctic", the
retrieval order of VOBs is given by PGC information #1 in VTS V1.
(2.1) Outline of the Disc Reproduction Device
[0137] The following is an explanation of the disc reproduction apparatus of the present
invention. The viewing setup for video titles, with an emphasis on a household audio-visual
disc reproduction apparatus (hereafter referred to as a "DVD player"), is shown in
Fig. 19. The illustrated setup is composed of DVD player 1, a wide-screen TV monitor
2, a standard TV monitor 3, and a remote controller 91.
[0138] DVD player 1 performs the reproduction of the video titles stored on an optical disc.
The reproduction of video titles by DVD player 1 consists of the conversion of the
VOB recorded on a DVD into an NTSC (National Television System Committee) or PAL (Phase
Alternating by Line) signal. Such signals are standardized according to international
television standards, so that the conversion of VOBs to such signals enables the video
titles recorded on a DVD to be reproduced by conventional TV sets in use around the
world.
[0139] DVD player 1 has an opening in the front of its case and has a drive mechanism for
driving a disc provided inside this opening.
[0140] A remote control receiving unit 92, which includes detecting elements for detecting
the infra red signals emitted by the remote controller 91, is provided on the front
of the DVD player 1, so that when the user makes an operation with the remote controller
91 in his/her hand, the remote control receiving unit 92 generates an interrupt signal
which indicates the inputted key.
[0141] A video output terminal and an audio output terminal are provided on the back of
the DVD player 1, so that when these terminals are connected to a standard TV set,
a video signal (in NTSC or PAL format) read from a DVD can be enjoyed by the user.
[0142] In the present embodiment, both the wide-screen TV monitor 2 and the standard TV
monitor 3 are TV sets which display the signal outputted by the DVD player 1. The
difference between these TV monitors lies in their aspect ratios, with wide-screen
TV monitor 2 having an aspect ratio of 16:9 and standard TV monitor 3 having an aspect
ratio of 4:3. Since the aspect ratio of standard TV monitor 3 is 4:3, the video content
can be arranged on the screen according to letterbox display mode or pan scan display
mode.
[0143] As mentioned in the description of the construction of the multimedia optical disc,
of the titles recorded on DVD 107, video title sets V1 and V2 are adapted for display
on a wide-screen TV, while video title set V3 is not adapted for such display.
[0144] In the present system, there are four possible viewing environments for the display
for video titles, based on the differences in the display modes of the TV sets and
whether or not the video titles have been adapted for wide-screen TV display. These
four possible viewing environments are shown in Fig. 20. These consist of a first
type in which a video title which has been adapted to wide-screen TV display (such
as video title which uses the video materials in video title set V1 or V2) is displayed
on a TV monitor which has an aspect ratio of 16:9, a second type in which a video
title which has been adapted to wide-screen TV display is displayed on a TV monitor
which has an aspect ratio of 4:3 using letterbox display mode, a third type in which
a video title which has been adapted to wide-screen TV display is displayed on a TV
monitor which has an aspect ratio of 4:3 using pan scan display mode, and a fourth
type in which a video title which has not been adapted to wide-screen TV display is
displayed on a TV monitor which has an aspect ratio of 4:3, with DVD player 1 performing
control to select one of these environments as the present viewing environment. Display
mode information is information for managing these modes, which can each be set its
own value. These four values can be expressed in binary as "00", "01", "10", and "11",
corresponding to "aspect ratio 4:3", "aspect ratio 16:9", "letterbox display mode",
and "pan scan display mode". In addition to receiving user settings of the display
mode value, the DVD player 1 also manages this value. This receiving of a user setting
of the display mode value enables the DVD player 1 to know the user's desired viewing
environment for a video title, and on receiving such a setting, the DVD player 1 stores
the display mode value corresponding to the chosen type of viewing environment so
that it can control the viewing environment based on this value.
[0145] The remote controller 91 is used to receive user operations. An example key arrangement
for remote controller 91 is shown in Fig. 21. As shown in Fig. 21, the ten key 911
is for numerical input which is made is combination with other keys. The cross-shaped
cursor keys 912 are for receiving cursor operations. The "Enter" key is for confirming
selection. The "Switch audio channel" key 913 is for cyclically changing the audio
logical channel number. Here, "cyclically changing" refers to the incrementing of
the value until a maximum value is reached, after which the value returns to zero.
For the example when there are eight channels, successive presses of a switch channel
key result in the incrementing of the channel number in "0", "1, "2", "3", "4", "5",
"6", "7", "0", "1", "2", "3", "4", "5", "6", "7" order to select one channel in the
range "0" to "7". The "Switch sub-picture channel" key 914 is for cyclically changing
the sub-picture logical channel number. Finally, the "Switch display mode" key 915
is for cyclically changing the display mode value.
(2.2) Construction Elements of the Disc Reproduction Device
[0146] Fig. 22A is a block diagram showing the construction of the DVD player used in the
present embodiment. The DVD player includes a drive mechanism 16, an optical pickup,
a mechanism control unit 83, a signal processing unit 84, an AV decoding unit 85,
a remote control receiving unit 92, and a system control unit 93. AV decoding unit
85 comprises a signal separating unit 86, a video decoder 87, a sub-picture decoder
88, audio decoder 89, a picture mixing unit 90, and a pan scan/letterbox conversion
unit 95.
[0147] The remote control receiving unit 92 receives a key signal which is infra red transmitted
when a key on the remote controller 91 is pressed, and generates in interrupt signal
indicative of the pressed key to notify the system control unit 93 of the pressed
key as a "reception instruction". Here, the kinds of reception instructions which
can be used to notify the system control unit 93 include start reproduction instructions,
stop reproduction instructions, button selection instructions, button confirmation
instructions, display mode switching instructions, sub-picture switching instructions,
and audio switching instructions.
[0148] The drive mechanism 16 comprises a platter on which an optical disc is placed and
spindle motor 81 for rotating the inserted optical disc. The platter can be moved
in and out of the DVD player by means of an eject mechanism which is not shown in
the drawing. The user places an optical disc on the platter when it has been projected
forward outside the DVD player. After this, the platter is moved back into the DVD
player to load the optical disc.
[0149] The mechanism control unit 83 controls the spindle motor 81 for rotating the disc
and the mechanism made up of the optical pickup for reading the signal from the disc
and actuator 82 of the optical pickup. More specifically, the mechanism control unit
83 adjusts the motor speed according to a track position specified by system control
unit 93. At the same time, it moves the optical pickup by controlling the actuator
82 of the pickup and, having detected a correct track by servo control, waits until
a desired physical sector is reached before continuously reading signals starting
from desired position.
[0150] The signal processing unit 84 converts the signals read using the optical pickup
into a sequence of digital data while performing various processes such as amplification,
waveform shaping, conversion to binary, demodulation, and error correction. It then
stores the processed data in a buffer memory inside the system control unit 93 in
logical block units.
[0151] The AV decoding unit 85 applies certain processes to the digital data inputted as
VOBs and converts the digital data into video signals and audio signals.
[0152] The signal separating unit 86 receives the digital data transferred from the buffer
memory in units of logical blocks (packets), and classifies the data into packs of
management information data, video data, sub-picture data, or audio data by identifying
the stream ID and sub-stream ID of each packet. The signal separating unit 86 outputs
video data to the video decoder 87, audio data to the audio data decoder 89, and sub-picture
data to the sub-picture decoder 88. The signal separating unit 86 also outputs management
information packs to the system control unit 93. When such data is outputted, the
system control unit 93 indicates numbers to the signal separating unit 86, with, as
shown in Fig. 6, these numbers indicating one set of audio data and one set of sub-picture
data. On receiving these indications from the system control unit 93, the signal separating
unit 86 outputs only the data on the specified channels to the audio decoder 89 and
the sub-picture decoder 89. The data on the other channels is discarded.
(2.2.1) Disc Reproduction Device - Construction of Signal Separating Unit 86
[0153] Fig. 22B is a block diagram showing the construction of the signal separating unit
86. As shown in the drawing, the signal separating unit 86 comprises an MPEG decoder
120, a sub-picture/audio separating unit 121, a sub-picture selecting unit 122, and
an audio selecting unit 123.
[0154] The MPEG decoder 120 determines the types of packs transferred from the buffer memory
by checking the stream IDs and outputting the packets as follows. If the stream ID
is "1110 0000", the MPEG decoder 120 outputs the packet to the video decoder 87. If
the stream ID is "1011 1101", the MPEG decoder outputs the packet to the sub-picture/audio
separating unit 121. Alternatively, if the stream ID is "1011 1111", the MPEG decoder
120 outputs the packet to the system control unit 93.
[0155] The sub-picture/audio separating unit 121 outputs the packets input from the MPEG
decoder 120 to the sub-picture selecting unit 122 if their sub-stream ID is "001*
**** or to the audio selecting unit 123 if their sub-stream ID is "1010 0***" or "1000
0***". As a result, each set of sub-picture data and audio data is appropriately output
to either the sub-picture selecting unit 122 or the audio selecting unit 123.
[0156] The sub-picture selecting unit 122 performs the selection processing for the sub-picture
packs sent from the sub-picture/audio separating unit 121. As mentioned above, up
to 32 sub-picture substreams can be included in a VOB, but when English subtitles,
for example, are indicated by the system control unit 93, the sub-picture selecting
unit 122 will only output the sub-picture packs with the substream ID corresponding
to English subtitles to the sub-picture decoder 88 and will discard the rest of the
sub-picture packs which do not have the corresponding substream ID. As a result, the
sub-picture decoder 88 will decode only the English subtitles.
[0157] The audio selecting unit 123 performs the selection processing for the audio packs
sent from the sub-picture/audio separating unit 121. The audio selecting unit 123
outputs only the audio data corresponding to the indication from the system control
unit 93 to the audio decoder 89 and discards the rest of the audio data which does
not have the corresponding substream ID. As one example, when English, French, and
Japanese dubbing soundtracks are available and the English dubbing soundtrack is selected
by the system control unit 93, the audio selecting unit 123 only outputs the audio
packs for the English dubbing soundtrack to the audio decoder 89, with the remaining
audio packs being discarded. As a result, the audio decoder 89 decodes only the English
dubbing soundtrack.
[0158] The video decoder 87 decodes and decompresses the video data sent from the signal
separating unit 86, before outputting the data to the picture mixing unit 90 as a
digital video signal.
[0159] The sub-picture decoder 88 includes a buffer for storing a plurality of sub-picture
packs sent from the signal separating unit 86, and obtains sub-picture units by combining
the sub-picture packs stored in this buffer.
[0160] Fig. 26 is a flowchart for the combining process of sub-picture packs. In step 51,
the variable i is initialized. This variable i is used to indicate each of the sub-picture
packs which are stored in the buffer in the sub-picture decoder 88 and which form
part of a sub-picture unit. In step S2, the sub-picture selecting unit 122 refers
to the substream ID (shown as the substream ID "inPACK" in the figure) of the sub-picture
packs which are inputted for storage in the buffer, and determines whether this substream
ID coincides with the substream ID indicated by the system control unit 93. The substream
ID indicated by the system control unit 93 is standardized according to the logical
channel number (CHx) and the display mode number (MODx), and so is referred to as
the substream ID (CHx, MODx).
[0161] If the substream IDs do not coincide, the sub-picture selecting unit 122 discards
the present sub-picture pack and the processing returns to step S2, where the sub-picture
selecting unit 122 waits for the input of the next sub-picture pack.
[0162] If the substream IDs coincide, in step S3 the sub-picture selecting unit 122 stores
the present sub-picture pack, sub-picture pack (inPACK), as the first element of the
sub-picture unit (in buffer[i]) (where i=1) in the buffer. In step S4, the SCR and
the PTS in the header of the sub-picture pack (in buffer[i]) are decoded and are compared
to the present time to see if they coincide. This check is performed since there is
the possibility that the decoding time for a sub-picture unit already stored in the
buffer will have been reached while the storage of sub-picture packs is repeatedly
performed according to the process described above.
[0163] If the decoding time has not been reached, the variable i is incremented in step
S5 and the processing returns to step S2, where the sub-picture selecting unit 122
waits for the input of the next sub-picture pack.
[0164] In the next iterations of the processing in steps S2 to S5, the sub-picture units
(in buffer[i]) (where i=2, 3, 4, 5) are successively stored in the buffer as the 2
nd, 3
rd, 4
th, and 5
th elements in the sub-picture unit.
[0165] Once the decoding time of the sub-picture unit is reached, in step S6 the RLE code
sequence in the sub-picture unit (in buffer) is expanded into image data and is outputted
to the image mixing unit 90, with, at the same time, the display command (in buffer[i])
of the sub-picture unit being read from the first address in the sub-picture unit
(in buffer) also being outputted to the image mixing unit 90.
[0166] Here, if the image data is made up of a plurality of items and the user makes a cursor
operation for these items, the system control unit 93 give an indication (called a
"color change indication") for a change in the indicated color of the image data to
the sub-picture decoder 88. Since such color change indications are performed based
on the item color number in the Highlight information, items are changed to the selection
color or confirmation color in accordance with this color change indication. By changing
the colors of items, the displayed cursor can be moved between the items. Here, the
image mixing unit 90 is informed of the coloring position and coloring range of the
image data indicated by the display commands in the sub-picture unit.
[0167] The following explanation will deal once again with the internal construction of
the DVD player shown in Fig. 22A. The audio decoder 89 decodes and expands the audio
data inputted from the signal separating unit 86 and outputs the result as a digital
audio signal.
[0168] The pan scan/letterbox conversion unit 95 performs pan scan conversion or letterbox
conversion of the video signal inputted from the video decoder in accordance with
the display mode indication from the system control unit 93. Here, if the set display
mode is wide-screen TV display mode or 4:3 aspect ratio display mode, the inputted
video data is outputted without processing.
[0169] When the indicated display mode is pan scan display mode, the left and right edges
of the video data are trimmed to convert the video data to a pan scan image. Alternatively,
when the indicated display mode is letterbox display mode, the image is reduced in
the vertical direction and corrective images are added above and below the image to
convert the video data to a letterbox image.
[0170] The picture mixing unit 90 outputs a video signal after mixing the outputs from video
decoder 87 and sub-picture decoder 88 according to the mixing ratio specified by system
control unit 93. In order to perform image mixing, the image mixing unit 90 is provided
with a plane buffer, with the image data expanded by the sub-picture decoder 88 being
arranged in the plane buffer into the superimposing position indicated by the display
command. As described above, this superimposing position is set by the sub-picture
decoder 88 decoding the display command in the sub-picture unit. After the image data
is positioned, the content of the plane buffer is mixed with the video signal outputted
by the pan scan/letterbox conversion unit 95. The mixing ratio used here is set based
on the contrast written in the PCI packet in the management information pack, with
it being possible to change the mixing ratio for each GOP. The mixed signal is then
converted into a video signal for NTSC format and is then outputted to the TV monitor.
[0171] The system control unit 93 controls the entire disc reproduction apparatus and is
provided with a program memory for storing a program for achieving the functions of
the system control unit 93, a work memory which is necessary for executing the program,
a buffer memory for storing the data in the logical blocks read from the disc, a CPU
(Central Processing Unit) for executing the program, and an interface control unit
for handling the input and output of control signals and of data to and from the periphery.
(2.2.2) Disc Reproduction Device - Construction of System Control Unit 93
[0172] The following is an explanation of the internal construction of the system control
unit 93 which is shown in Fig. 23. As shown in the figure, the system control unit
93 is made up of a remote control input interpreting unit 71, a reproduction control
unit 72, a button control unit 73, a command interpreting/executing unit 74, a PGC
information buffer 75, a buffer memory 76, and a system state management unit 750.
[0173] The remote controller input interpreting unit 71 interprets the remote control key
data received by the remote control receiving unit 92. This interpreted remote control
key data can be button selection instruction, a button confirmation instruction, a
menu call instruction, an audio switching instruction, a sub-picture switching instruction,
a display mode switching instruction, a start reproduction instruction, or a stop
reproduction instruction. Of these, button selection instructions and button confirmation
instructions are outputted to the button control unit 73, while start reproduction
instructions and stop reproduction instructions are outputted to the reproduction
control unit 72. Audio switching instructions, sub-picture switching instructions,
and display mode switching instructions are outputted to the system state management
unit 750.
[0174] The button control unit 73 stores the management information pack of the VOB currently
being reproduced which it receives from the AV decoder unit 85, and, when a button
selection instruction and a button confirmation instruction are received from the
remote controller input interpreting unit 71, outputs a control signal to the AV decoder
unit 85 for changing the color of the sub-picture in a screen area assigned to the
button to the confirmation color, in accordance with the Highlight information in
the PCI packet of the stored management information pack. Also, when a button confirmation
instruction is received, it sends the command assigned to the selected button to the
command interpreting/executing unit 74.
[0175] The command interpreting/executing unit 74 interprets the command inputted from the
button control unit 73 and, if there is a change of PGC information which changes
the reproduction route, the command interpreting/executing unit 74 outputs a reproduction
control instruction notifying the reproduction control unit 72 of the new PGC information.
The command interpreting/executing unit 74 also outputs a system state control instruction
notifying the system state management unit 750 of when there has been a change to
the state parameters stored inside the system.
[0176] The PGC information buffer 75 stores the current PGC information which is used by
the DVD player during reproduction, out of all the sets of PGC information included
in the PGC table.
[0177] The buffer memory 76 is used for storing the data which has been subjected to the
various processes such as amplification, waveform shaping, conversion to binary, demodulation,
and error correction. If the data written into the buffer memory 76 is Video Title
Set management information, it is written into another buffer which is not illustrated.
On the other hand, if the data is a VOB, the system control unit 93 transfers the
data one pack at a time to the signal separating unit 86. When VOBs are transferred
in this way, the management information packs will be sent back from the AV decoder
unit 85.
[0178] The system state management unit 750 includes a group of state registers which is
made up of various kinds of registers showing the present state of the disc reproduction
apparatus. These registers are the title number register 751, the PGC number register
752, the audio channel register 753, the sub-picture channel register 754, and the
video attribute register 755.
[0179] The title number register 751 stores the title number of the title selected for reproduction.
[0180] The PGC number register 752 stores the number of the PGC information which is being
used in the retrieval of the present VOB, out of all of the PGC information included
in the video title whose number is stored by the title number register 751.
[0181] The audio channel number register 753 stores the number of the audio channel which
is presently valid, and outputs a control signal informing the AV decoder 85 of the
audio channel which is to be reproduced.
[0182] The sub-picture channel number register 754 stores the number of the sub-picture
channel which is presently valid, and outputs a control signal informing the AV decoder
85 of the sub-picture channel which is to be reproduced. The logical channel number
stored by this register is hereinafter referred to as the sub-picture channel CHx.
[0183] The video attribute register 755 stores the aspect ratio information in the VTS management
information in its higher-order bits and the display mode number showing the present
display mode of the TV monitor in its lower-order bits. If the aspect ratio information
stored by the higher-order bits is "16:9", the display mode information can be cyclically
changed so as to be one of "standard display mode", "pan scan display mode", and "letterbox
display mode". If the aspect ratio information stored by the higher-order bits is
"4:3", the display mode information is fixed at "standard display mode".
[0184] The reproduction control unit 72 receives reproduction start instructions, reproduction
stop instructions, and menu call instructions, and performs predetermined control
operations.
[0185] Figs. 24A to 24C and 25A and 25B are flowcharts showing the processing performed
by the system control unit 93. These flowcharts will be referred to in the following
explanation of the operation of DVD player 1.
[0186] When the user presses the eject button on DVD player 1, the platter is moved outside
the cover. After the user places an optical disc on this platter, the platter is moved
back into the DVD player 1 to load the disc. As shown in step S121 of Fig. 24A, the
system control unit 93 first waits for a disc to be inserted, and, on detecting that
a disc has been loaded using an optical sensor or the like, controls the mechanism
control unit 83 and the signal processing unit 84 to perform rotation control with
the optical pickup positioned in the lead-in region. This operation continues until
stabilized rotation has been achieved, at which point the optical pickup is moved
outward from the lead-in region to read the volume management area. Based on the information
in this volume management area, the video manager is written into a buffer (step S122).
The system control unit 93 also calculates the storage address of the PGC information
for the volume menu, and writes the PGC information into the PGC information buffer
75 (step S123). Since this PGC information is for the volume menu, it is stored in
the buffer so that the system control unit 93 can refer to its content and calculate
the storage address of the VOBs to be reproduced for the menu. Once the VOB to be
reproduced is decided, the system control unit 93 outputs a control signal to the
mechanism control unit 83 and to the signal control unit 84 and has the determined
VOBs read from the optical disc. As a result, a volume menu, such as that shown in
Fig. 18, is displayed on the TV monitor 2 (step S124). While this volume menu is displayed,
the reproduction control unit 72 waits for the selection of a title number (step S125).
[0187] Here, the user views the list of titles and confirms a selection of his/her desired
title number. The selected title number is displayed, and the Highlight command, "PlayTitle",
which is stored corresponding to the selected title number, is read. Following this,
in step S127 the VTS number #i and the VTS internal title number #j are read from
the title search pointer #k corresponding to the title number #k indicated by the
operands of the "PlayTitle" command.
[0188] Next, in step S131 of Fig. 24B, the aspect ratio information included in the VTS
management information for VTS#i is read and in step S132, it is determined whether
the read aspect ratio information is 16:9. If this is not the case, such as for VTS
V3 which has an aspect ratio of 4:3, the processing advances to S144. If the read
aspect ratio is 16:9, the processing advances to S133 where the initial value of the
display mode MODx is read from the video attribute register 755, before the processing
advances to the determination in step S138. In step S138, the system determines whether
the display mode MODx is pan scan display mode, and if so, the processing advances
to step S139 where the pan scan/letterbox conversion unit 95 is informed of pan scan
display mode, before the processing advances to step S144.
[0189] If, in step S138, the read display mode MODx is not pan scan display mode, the processing
advances to step S140, where the system determines whether the display mode MODx is
letterbox display mode. If so, the processing advances to step S141 where the pan
scan/letterbox conversion unit 95 is informed of letterbox display mode, before the
processing advances to step S144.
[0190] In step S144, the title number#j and the number of the Entry-PGC information are
read from the title search pointer of VTS#i indicated by VTS number#i and are respectively
written into the title number register 751 and the PGC number register 752. After
this, the route processing routine is called in step S145 with the read PGC information#k
as the Entry-PGC information.
[0191] Fig. 24C is the flowchart for the route processing routine. In this figure, the "VOB
pointer" indicates the VOB to be read, out of the VOB position information in the
PGC information stored in the PGC information buffer 75, while the "block pointer"
indicates the logical block which is presently being read, out of the VOB indicated
by the VOB pointer.
[0192] In step S161, the logical channel number CHx stored in the sub-picture channel register
754 is read, and the display mode number stored in the video attribute register 755
is read. In step S162, the sub-picture substream which has a substream ID that coincides
with the combination (CHx, MODx) of the numbers read in step S161 is determined out
of the 32 substreams which can be included in the VOB. This is determined by referring
to the sub-picture mapping information of PGC information#k which is stored in the
PGC information buffer 75. When the combined number (CHx, MODx) is mapped onto one
of the substream IDs, only the substream packs with this substream ID (hereinafter
referred to a substream ID (CHx, MODx) are decoded in step S163, with the sub-picture
selecting unit 122 and the sub-picture decoder 88 being instructed beforehand to discard
sub-picture packs with other substream IDs.
[0193] Once these indications have been sent to the sub-picture selecting unit 122 and the
sub-picture decoder 88, the processing advances to S164 where the system control unit
93 initializes the VOB pointer by setting the first VOB in the VOB position information
table of PGC information#k in the VOB pointer. In step S165, the system control unit
93 initializes the block pointer by setting the first logical block in VOB#i indicated
by the VOB pointer in the block pointer. Next, in step S166, a check is performed
to see whether an event has been caused by a user operation, and if not, in step S167,
the mechanism control unit 83 and the signal processing unit 84 are activated to read
the logical block indicated by the block pointer. Here, since each VOB is made up
of a plurality of VOB units which each have a management information pack at the front,
a management information pack is read first by the signal processing unit 84. The
signal processing unit subjects the signal read by the optical pickup to the variety
of processes described above, and the processed data is stored in logical block units
in the buffer memory inside the system control unit 93. The signal separating unit
86 receives the packs transmitted from the buffer memory and refers to the stream
ID and substream ID in the header of each pack to detect whether each pack is a management
information pack. Here, detected management information packs are outputted to the
system control unit 93.
[0194] The reproduction control unit 72 sets the transfer rate and buffer size included
in each management information pack and prepares for the decoding of the video pack,
audio pack, and sub-picture pack which follow the management information pack in question.
[0195] Next, in step S168, the reproduction control unit 72 judges whether the block pointer
is indicating the final logical block in VOB#i, and if not, the processing advances
to step S169, where the variable j is incremented by one, and to step S170, where
the block pointer is updated to the jth logical block in VOB#i. After this, the processing
returns to step S166 in Fig. 24C.
[0196] By repeating the processing in steps S166 to S170, all of the video packs, audio
packs, and sub-picture packs which compose the present VOB are successively read.
The signal processing unit 84 performs the stated processing for the signal read by
the optical pickup and stores the data in logical block units in the buffer memory
inside the system control unit 93. The signal processing unit 86 receives the packs
sent from the buffer memory and determines the stream ID and substream ID in the header
of each pack.
[0197] For video packs, the MPEG decoder 120 judges whether the stream ID is "1110 0000"
and outputs the packs to the video decoder 87. The video decoder 87 decodes the packs
according to MPEG methods and, having waited an appropriate time according to the
SCR and PTS, outputs the decoded video signal to the picture mixing unit 90.
[0198] For sub-picture packs, the MPEG decoder 120 judges whether the stream ID is "1011
1101" and whether the first three bits of the substream ID are "001". The sub-picture
selecting unit 122 refers to the lower-order five bits of the sub-stream ID and judges
whether the display mode indicated in the read sub-picture pack coincides with the
substream ID (CHx, MODx) indicated by the system control unit 93. This substream ID
(CHx, MODx) is the substream ID, out of the sub-picture mapping information in PGC
information #k, which coincides with the combination of the logical channel number
(CHx) stored by the sub-picture channel register 754 and the display mode number MODx
stored by the video attribute register 755. The sub-picture selecting unit 122 discards
sub-picture packs which do not have this substream ID (CHx, MODx). Here, the logical
channel number (CHx) stored by the sub-picture channel register 754 and the display
mode number MODx stored by the video attribute register 755 are set in the disc reproduction
apparatus in accordance with user operations, or with values which are set within
the disc reproduction apparatus before shipping from the factory. By having only the
matching sub-picture packs
[0199] outputted from the sub-picture selecting unit 122 to the sub-picture decoder 88,
the sub-picture decoder 88 will only receive sub-picture data for the display mode
and the subtitle language settings which are currently operational. The sub-picture
decoder 88 subjects the received sub-picture packs to run-length decoding and waits
for an appropriate period of time based on the SCR and the PTS before outputting the
result of the decoding to the image mixing unit 90. The outputs of the video decoder
87 and the sub-picture decoder 88 are then mixed by the image mixing unit 90 according
to the mixing ratio specified by the system control unit 93. This mixed signal is
converted into an analog signal and is outputted to the wide-screen TV monitor 2 or
the standard TV monitor 3.
[0200] When the above processing has been repeated a number of times, the block pointer
ends up indicating the final logical block in the VOB indicated by the VOB pointer.
When this is the case, the judgment "Yes" is given in step S168, and the processing
advances to step S151, where it is judged whether the VOB pointer is indicating the
final VOB in the VOB position information table for PGC information #k. If this is
not the case, in step S152 the variable i is incremented and in step S153 the VOB
pointer is set to indicate the next VOB in the VOB position information of PGC#k.
The processing then returns to step S165 and the processing in steps S166 to S170
is repeated for the newly indicated VOB.
[0201] By repeating the above processing, the VOB pointer will end up indicating the final
VOB in the VOB position information table of PGC information #k, with this being detected
in step S151. If the VOB pointer indicates the final VOB in a VOB position information
table, this means that the reproduction route indicated by one set of PGC information
has been completed. Once a reproduction route has been completed, a check is performed
to see if a post-processing command is present in the command field of the PGC information
stored in the PGC information buffer 75. When such a command is present, the branch
destination PGC information #k is set according to the post-processing command in
step S157, while if no command is present, the branch destination PGC information
#k is set in step S159 according to the PGC link information. After the branch destination
PGC information #k has been set, a recurrent call of the route processing routine
is performed.
[0202] The following is an explanation of the case when the user presses the "switch display
mode" key 915 during the repeated retrieval of VOBs in steps S166-S170 in the flowchart
of Fig. 24C. When the "switch display mode" key 915 is pressed, the judgment "Yes"
is given in step S166 and the processing switches to step S174 of the flowchart in
Fig. 25A. Step S174 is performed to determine whether the switch display mode key
915 has been pressed, so that in the present case the judgment "Yes" is given and
the processing advances to step S131 where the aspect ratio information is read from
the VTS management information of VTS#i. Once this has been read, a determination
is performed in step S132 to see whether the read aspect information is "16:9 wide
screen".
[0203] If the read aspect ratio information is "16:9 wide screen", the processing advances
to step S133, where the display mode information MODx stored in the video attribute
register 755 is read. In step S134, the set value of the display mode information
MODx is incremented, and the incremented value is stored once again in the video attribute
register 755 to update the display mode information.
[0204] As one example, when the set value MODx of the display mode represents "wide-screen
TV display mode", the updating in step S134 can update the set value MODx to a value
which represents "letterbox display mode".
[0205] As another example, when the set value MODx of the display mode represents "letterbox
display mode", the updating in step S134 can update the set value MODx to a value
which represents "pan scan display mode".
[0206] After updating, the processing advances to step S138 where the system determines
whether the stored display mode MODx is pan scan display mode, and if so, the processing
advances to step S139 where the pan scan/letterbox conversion unit 95 is informed
of pan scan display mode, before the processing advances to step S161.
[0207] If in step S138, the read display mode MODx is not pan scan display mode, the processing
advances to step S140, where the system determines whether the stored display mode
MODx is letterbox display mode. If so, the processing advances to step S141 where
the pan scan/letterbox conversion unit 95 is informed of letterbox display mode, before
the processing advances to step S161.
[0208] In step S161, the logical channel number CHx stored by the sub-picture channel register
754 and the display mode number MODx stored by the video attribute register 755 are
read. In step S162, the sub-picture substream which has a substream ID that coincides
with the combination (CHx, MODx) of the numbers read in step S161 is determined out
of the 32 substreams which can be included in the VOB. This is determined by referring
to the sub-picture mapping information of PGC information#k which is stored in the
PGC information buffer 75. When the combined number (CHx, MODx) is mapped onto one
of the substream IDs, only the substream packs with this substream ID (hereinafter
referred to a substream ID (CHx, MODx) are decoded in step S163, with the sub-picture
selecting unit 122 and the sub-picture decoder 88 being instructed to discard sub-picture
packs with other substream IDs.
[0209] As described above, when the switch display mode key 915 is pressed, the display
mode MODx stored in the video attribute register 755 is incremented, a switching of
display mode is performed by the pan scan/letterbox conversion unit 95, and the sub-picture
data to be decoded is selected in accordance with the newly set display mode. By doing
so, even if the user requests a switching of display mode during the reproduction
of a video title, the sub-picture data which includes a display command that sets
the superimposing position for the new display mode will be selected.
[0210] The following is an explanation of the case when the user presses the "switch sub-picture
channel" key 914 during the repeated retrieval of VOBs in steps S166-S170 in the flowchart
of Fig. 24C. When the "switch sub-picture channel" key 914 is pressed, the judgment
"Yes" is given in step S166 and the processing switches to step S174 of the flowchart
in Fig. 25A. Step S174 is performed to determine whether the switch display mode key
915 has been pressed, so that in the present case the judgment "No" is given and the
processing advances to step S175. In step S175, it is determined whether the switch
sub-picture key 914 has been pressed, so that in the present case the judgment "Yes"
is given and the processing advances to step S176. In step S176, the logical channel
number CHx stored in the sub-picture channel register 754 is read and is incremented.
Next, in step S133, the display mode information MODx stored in the video attribute
register 755 is read. In step S162, the sub-picture substream which has a substream
ID that coincides with the combination (CHx, MODx) of the read numbers is determined
out of the 32 possible substreams which can be included in the VOB. This is determined
by referring to the sub-picture mapping information of PGC information#k which is
stored in the PGC information buffer 75. When the combined number (CHx, MODx) is mapped
onto one of the substream IDs, only the substream packs with this substream ID (hereinafter
referred to a substream ID (CHx, MODx) are decoded in step S163, with the sub-picture
selecting unit 122 and the sub-picture decoder 88 being instructed to discard sub-picture
packs with other substream IDs. In step S177, the incremented channel number (CHx)
is stored once again in the sub-picture channel register 754.
[0211] As described above, when the switch sub-picture channel key 914 is pressed, the logical
channel number stored in the sub-picture channel register 754 is incremented, a switching
of the logical channel number is performed by the pan scan/letterbox conversion unit
95, and the sub-picture data to be decoded is selected in accordance with the newly
set channel number. By doing so, even if the user requests a switching of display
language of subtitles during the reproduction of a video title, the sub-picture data
which includes a display command that sets the superimposing position for the new
display language will be selected.
[0212] Figs. 27A to 27D show the combined images given by combining the main image and the
sub-picture in the four display types shown in Fig. 20.
[0213] For the first display type which corresponds to the case when the aspect ratio of
the screen is 16:9 and the video materials have been adapted for wide-screen display,
the DVD player 1 superimposes the English subtitles "Penguin" at the superimposing
position (Xw1, Yw1) to (Xw2, Yw2) shown in Fig. 13C which is unique to wide-screen
TV display mode. As can be seen from Figs. 27A and 27C, the subtitles are superimposed
at a position in wide-screen TV display mode which protrudes into the area trimmed
in pan scan display mode. This sub-picture unit displayed in wide-screen TV display
mode can therefore be seen to make full use of the width of a wide-screen TV and is
superimposed at the position shown in Fig. 27A.
[0214] For the second display type which corresponds to the case when the display mode is
"4:3 letterbox" and the video materials have been adapted for wide-screen display,
the DVD player 1 superimposes the English subtitles "Penguin" at the superimposing
position (Xb1, Yb1) to (Xb2, Yb2) shown in Fig. 13B which is unique to letterbox display
mode. As shown in Fig. 13B, the subtitles "Penguin" are superimposed at a position
which is neatly positioned over the corrective image. By setting the superimposing
position of RLE code sequence f11 in this way, the subtitles can be displayed in letterbox
display mode at a position which does not overlap the main image, with this being
shown in Fig. 27B.
[0215] For the third display type which corresponds to the case when the display mode is
"4:3 pan scan" and the video materials have been adapted for wide-screen display,
the DVD player 1 superimposes the English subtitles "Penguin" at the superimposing
position (Xp1, Yp1) to (Xp2, Yp2) shown in Fig. 13A which is unique to pan scan display
mode. As shown in Fig. 13A, the subtitles have been superimposed at a position which
has been shifted somewhat to the left so as to not protrude into the trimmed area.
As a result, the subtitles do not end up being trimmed and so can be properly displayed,
as shown in Fig. 27C.
[0216] For the fourth display type which corresponds to the case when the aspect ratio of
the screen is 4:3 and the video materials have not been adapted for wide-screen display,
DVD player 1 superimposes the English subtitles "Big Fish" as shown in Fig. 27D.
[0217] With the present embodiment of the invention described above, a multimedia optical
disc can be achieved where information for the selection of sub-picture information,
in accordance with the settings of display mode and sub-picture channel number, is
stored for each unit of PGC information. As a result, a disc reproduction apparatus
can change the substream ID by which the selection of sub-picture information is made
for every PGC information unit.
[0218] As one example, in one set of PGC information, the substream ID#1 can represent English
subtitles and letterbox display mode, substream ID#2 can represent English subtitles
and pan scan display mode, and substream ID#3 can represent English subtitles and
wide-screen TV display mode. Even so, in a different set of PGC information, all display
modes can be set at, say, substream ID#2 by changing the sub-picture mapping information
in the PGC information. This corresponds to the case where the subtitles are centered
on the screen and so are largely unaffected by the selected display mode. As a result,
all display modes may use the same substream.
[0219] The present invention has been described in terms of one specific embodiment, although
it should be obvious that several modifications are possible within its scope, provided
they are still relate to a system which avoids the displacement of a sub-picture when
switching display mode. Examples of possible modifications are given below.
(a) The present embodiment describes the case where a digital video disc (DVD) is
used as the multimedia optical disc, although any other type of recording media which
can store a plurality of sub-pictures multiplexed with video data may be used. The
reproduction device is also described as reproducing a DVD, although so long as it
receives information in which a plurality of sub-pictures are multiplexed with video
information, this need not be the case. The reproduction device may instead include
a reception means for receiving data communication. An example of this communication
would be a digital broadcast of a MPEG stream using satellite broadcasting. Here,
frequency multiplexing and time axis multiplexing are available as methods for transmitting
a plurality of MPEG streams to allow selective reproduction. In the time axis multiplexing
method, selective reproduction is performed by waiting for the broadcast of the selected
MPEG stream and reproducing the stream when it is transferred.
(b) In the present embodiment, all video materials which are adapted to wide-screen
display mode are described as having the potential to be displayed in pan scan display
mode or letterbox display mode, although in reality, there are cases where the video
content is unsuited to trimming or reduction, making it necessary to clarify such
limitations. To overcome this problem, "display mode information", which shows whether
letterbox or pan scan display modes are available, can be included in the video title
set management information to prevent the user from selecting letterbox or pan scan
display mode where inappropriate.
(c) The VOB position information table of the present invention has been described
as a list of storage locations for VOBs, based on which the disc reproduction apparatus
reads VOBs, although by storing partial areas of the storage locations of the VOBs
in this table, the optical pickup can be made to read only part of the VOBs, such
partial reading being known as "trimming". These trimmed parts of VOBs are indicated
in units called cells. By doing so, by indicating partial areas in the VOB position
information, only part of a VOB is used as a core part, so that an increase in the
efficiency with which video materials are used can be made.
(d) In the present embodiment, the subtitles are described as being composed of image
data, although it is equally possible for the sub-picture to be composed of vector
graphics, or three-dimensional computer graphics (CG). By doing so, games which use
compressed video footage and computer graphics can be achieved using the present disc.
(e) In the present embodiment, a VOB unit consists of one GOP, although it should
be needless to say that if the stored video information has a reproduction time of
about one second, a VOB unit may consist of two or three GOPs with a very short reproduction
time. In this case, one management information pack is set before such a plurality
of consecutive GOPs. The management information pack is then effective for the plurality
of GOPs.
(f) In the present embodiment, PCM data and AC-3 data are used as the audio data,
although any other format which may be interleaved into a system stream may be used,
with examples of such being compressed PCM, MPEG audio data, and MIDI data.
(g) In the present embodiment, digital moving picture data according to MPEG2 standard
is used for the moving picture data. However, other kinds of moving picture data,
such as the digital moving picture data under MPEG1 or digital moving picture data
with a conversion algorithm other than DCT (Discrete Cosine Transform) under MPEG,
may be used so long as the moving picture data can be combined with audio data and
sub-picture data to form multimedia data.
(h) In the present embodiment, management information packs are included in VOBUs
in units of GOPs, these being the units of reproducing moving picture data. However,
it should be obvious that if the method for compressing digital moving pictures changes,
the unit of the management information pack changes according to the compression method.
[0220] Finally, a method for producing the optical disc used in the present embodiment is
described. The editor prepares master tapes, such as video tapes of various shots
filmed with video cameras and music tapes in which songs and sounds are recorded live.
The moving pictures and sounds in the tapes are digitized and loaded into a nonlinear
editing machine. The editor creates menus and items using application programs, such
as a graphic editor provided in an editing machine, and reproduces video and sounds
frame by frame. The editor also creates management information packs including Highlight
commands using a GUI generator or the like. The editor then encodes the above data
according to MPEG standards to create video data, audio data, sub-picture data, and
management information packs. After this, the editor creates VOB units and VOBs using
the nonlinear editing machine. The editor also assigns numbers to the VOBs. Also,
the editor creates PGC information #1, #2, #3, ..., #n, a VM title search pointer
table, and a video manager. The editor then loads these sets of data into the memory
of a workstation.
[0221] The data is converted into logical data sequences so that the data is recorded in
the file area. The logical data sequences are recorded onto a medium, such as the
magnetic tape, then converted to physical data sequences. The physical data sequences
include volume data with ECC (Error Check Code), Eight-to-Sixteen conversion, and
data in the lead-in area and lead-out area. A master optical disc is produced using
the physical data sequences. Then, copies of the master optical disc are manufactured
by using a pressing machine.
[0222] Conventional CD manufacturing machines may be used for manufacturing the above-constructed
optical disc with the exception of the processes related to the generation of logical
data sequences for the data construction of the present invention. These manufacturing
methods are described in Heitaro Nakajima and Hiroji Ogawa: "Compact Disc Dokuhon",
Ohmu Ltd. and Applied Physics Society Optics Meeting: Optical Disc System, Asakura
Shoten.
Commercial Applications
[0223] The multimedia optical disc of the present invention stores high impact wide-screen
TV video titles and allows the favorable distribution and retailing of such optical
titles.
[0224] The reproduction apparatus and method of the present invention allow the reproduction
of the above disc by low cost household AV equipment with limited memory capacity.
[0225] Although the present invention has been fully described by way of examples with reference
to the accompanying drawings, it is to be noted that various changes and modifications
will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Therefore, unless such changes and modifications
depart from the scope of the present invention, they should be construed as being
included therein.
1. A multimedia optical disc for recording main video data which is composed of a sequence
of a plurality of sets of frame data, each set of frame data being processed beforehand
to enable display at an aspect ratio specified out of a plurality of aspect ratios,
wherein the multimedia optical disc comprises:
a stream area in which streams made up of the main video data and a plurality of sets
of sub-picture data are recorded, wherein each set of sub-picture data includes a
set of tel-op data and a set of coordinate information showing a display position
of the set of tel-op data; and
a control area in which a plurality of pairings of a set of display mode information
and a set of sub-picture indicating information are recorded,
wherein each set of display mode information shows a species of display method according
to which the frame data is to be processed for a case when the frame data decoded
from the main video data is displayed at one of the plurality of aspect ratios,
and wherein each set of sub-picture indicating information shows a set of sub-picture
data, out of the plurality of sets of sub-picture data in a same stream as the main
video data, which includes a set of coordinate information which coincides with the
species of display method shown by the display mode information.
2. The multimedia optical disc of Claim 1,
wherein the plurality of aspect ratios includes "4:3" and "16:9",
and wherein the frame data is processed according to one of the following species
of display method:
wide-screen television mode in which images with an aspect ratio of 16:9 are displayed
on a display screen with an aspect ratio of 16:9;
standard television mode in which images with an aspect ratio of 4:3 are displayed
on a display screen with an aspect ratio of 4:3;
pan scan mode in which images with an aspect ratio of 16:9 are displayed on a display
screen with an aspect ratio of 4:3 after trimming to give 4:3 aspect ratio images;
and
letterbox display mode in which images with an aspect ratio of 16:9 are displayed
on a display screen with an aspect ratio of 4:3 after processing to add corrective
images.
3. The multimedia optical disc of Claim 2, wherein each set of sub-picture data includes
at least one of the following types of coordinate information:
wide-screen television mode coordinate information for setting a display position
of tel-op data when the frame data is processed according to wide-screen television
mode;
standard television mode coordinate information for setting a display position of
tel-op data in a coordinate system for display according to standard television mode;
pan scan mode coordinate information for setting a display position of tel-op data
in a coordinate system for display according to pan scan mode; and
letterbox mode coordinate information for setting a display position of tel-op data
in a coordinate system for display according to letterbox mode,
and wherein the control area is arranged such that
sub-picture indicating information which indicates a set of sub-picture data that
includes wide-screen television mode coordinate information is paired with display
mode information which shows wide-screen television mode,
sub-picture indicating information which indicates a set of sub-picture data that
includes standard television mode coordinate information is paired with display mode
information which shows standard television mode,
sub-picture indicating information which indicates a set of sub-picture data that
includes pan scan mode coordinate information is paired with display mode information
which shows pan scan mode, and
sub-picture indicating information which indicates a set of sub-picture data that
includes letterbox mode coordinate information is paired with display mode information
which shows letterbox mode.
4. A multimedia optical disc for recording main video data which is composed of a sequence
of a plurality of sets of frame data, each set of frame data being processed to enable
display at an aspect ratio specified out of a plurality of aspect ratios, wherein
the multimedia optical disc comprises:
a stream area in which streams made up of the main video data and a plurality of sets
of sub-picture data are recorded, wherein each set of sub-picture data includes a
set of tel-op data and a set of coordinate information showing a display position
of the set of tel-op data; and
a control area in which a plurality of sets of scenario information are recorded,
wherein each logical channel number if used to classify a set of sub-picture in terms
of an image content of a set of tel-op data;
wherein each set of scenario information is composed of a set of retrieval information
showing addresses of streams recorded in the stream area, a set of selection condition
information for each set of sub-picture data, the selection condition information
showing a selection condition for selecting a set of sub-picture data which is to
be used when streams are read according to a set of retrieval information, and a set
of branch information showing a set of scenario information which should be selected
after all of the streams indicated by a present set of retrieval information have
been read,
wherein the selection condition information includes a plurality of groupings of a
logical channel number, a set of display mode information, and a set of sub-picture
indicating information;
wherein a set of display mode information shows a species of display method according
to which the frame data is to be processed for a case when the frame data decoded
from the main video data is displayed at one of the plurality of aspect ratios,
and wherein a set of sub-picture indicating information indicates a set of sub-picture
data, out of the plurality of sets of sub-picture data included in a same stream as
the main video data, by setting a pairing of a logical channel number and the species
of display method shown by the display mode information as a selection condition.
5. The multimedia optical disc of Claim 4, wherein the plurality of aspect ratios includes
"4:3" and "16:9", and wherein the frame data is processed according to one of the
following species of display method:
wide-screen television mode in which images with an aspect ratio of 16:9 are displayed
on a display screen with an aspect ratio of 16:9;
standard television mode in which images with an aspect ratio of 4:3 are displayed
on a display screen with an aspect ratio of 4:3;
pan scan mode in which images with an aspect ratio of 16:9 are displayed on a display
screen with an aspect ratio of 4:3 after trimming to give 4:3 aspect ratio images;
and
letterbox display mode in which images with an aspect ratio of 16:9 are displayed
on a display screen with an aspect ratio of 4:3 after processing to add corrective
images.
6. The multimedia optical disc of Claim 5, wherein each set of sub-picture data includes
at least one of the following types of coordinate information:
wide-screen television mode coordinate information for setting a display position
of tel-op data when the frame data is processed according to wide-screen television
mode;
standard television mode coordinate information for setting a display position of
tel-op data in a coordinate system for display according to standard television mode;
pan scan mode coordinate information for setting a display position of tel-op data
in a coordinate system for display according to pan scan mode; and
letterbox mode coordinate information for setting a display position of tel-op data
in a coordinate system for display according to letterbox mode,
and wherein the sets of selection condition information in the control area are such
that
sub-picture indicating information which indicates a set of sub-picture data that
includes wide-screen television mode coordinate information is paired with display
mode information which shows wide-screen television mode,
sub-picture indicating information which indicates a set of sub-picture data that
includes standard television mode coordinate information is paired with display mode
information which shows standard television mode,
sub-picture indicating information which indicates a set of sub-picture data that
includes pan scan mode coordinate information is paired with display mode information
which shows pan scan mode, and
sub-picture indicating information which indicates a set of sub-picture data that
includes letterbox mode coordinate information is paired with display mode information
which shows letterbox mode.
7. The multimedia optical disc of Claim 6, wherein the sets of tel-op data in the plurality
of sets of sub-picture data are sets of subtitles for different languages and wherein
the logical channel numbers are numbers for classifying the sets of sub-picture data
according to the languages of the subtitles.
8. The multimedia optical disc of Claim 7, wherein the stream area and the control area
are formed on a surface of an information layer, wherein the information layer is
formed between a first transparent substrate and a second transparent substrate, each
of the first transparent substrate and the second transparent substrate having a thickness
range of 0.5mm to 0.7mm.
9. The multimedia optical disc of Claim 5, wherein the tel-op data included in each set
of sub-picture data is one of the following:
character string information for wide-screen television mode which uses a predetermined
font;
character string information for standard television mode which uses the same predetermined
font;
character string information for pan scan mode which uses the same predetermined font;
and
character string information for letterbox mode which uses the same predetermined
font,
and wherein the plurality of sets of selection condition information recorded in the
control area are such that
sub-picture indicating information which indicates the character string information
for wide-screen television mode is paired with the display mode information showing
wide-screen television mode,
sub-picture indicating information which indicates the character string information
for standard television mode is paired with the display mode information showing standard
television mode,
sub-picture indicating information which indicates the character string information
for pan scan mode is paired with the display mode information showing pan scan mode,
and
sub-picture indicating information which indicates the character string information
for letterbox mode is paired with the display mode information showing letterbox mode.
10. A reproduction apparatus for a multimedia optical disc, wherein the multimedia optical
disc has
a stream area which includes main video data, which is an arrangement of a plurality
of sets of frame data which has been processed to enable display at an aspect ratio
specified out of a plurality of aspect ratios, and a plurality of sets of sub-picture
data, which each include a set of tel-op data and a set of coordinate information
for a display position of the set of tel-op data,
and a control area which includes a plurality of pairings of display mode information
that shows a species of display method for processing frame data, which has been decoded
from the main video data in a stream, for display at one of the plurality of aspect
ratios, and sub-picture indicating information which indicates one set of sub-picture
data, out of a plurality of sets of sub-picture data included in a same stream as
the main video image, which includes coordinate information that corresponds to the
species shown by display mode information,
the reproduction apparatus comprising:
an optical pickup for optically reading data from the multimedia optical disc;
a drive mechanism for driving the optical pickup;
first controlling means for controlling the drive mechanism to have the optical pickup
read data from a control area of the optical disc;
a buffer for storing at least one set of display mode information and one set of sub-picture
indicating information included in the data read according to control by the first
controlling means;
second controlling means for controlling the drive mechanism to have the optical pickup
read a stream from the optical disc;
a display setting register for storing display style information showing a species
of display method by which frame data is to be processed;
a video decoder for decoding main video data included in the stream read from the
optical disc into frame data;
determining means for referring to sets of display mode information included in the
data stored in the buffer and for determining sub-picture indicating information which
coincides with display style information stored in the display setting register;
a sub-picture decoder for decoding a set of sub-picture data indicated by the determined
sub-picture indicating information into a set of tel-op data, out of a plurality of
sets of sub-picture data included in the stream read from the optical disc;
processing means for processing images of frame data, based on the display style information
stored in the display setting register; and
combining means for arranging the decoded set of tel-op data onto the processed images
of frame data in accordance with coordinate information included in a set of sub-picture
data and for combining the tel-op data and processed images.
11. The reproduction apparatus of Claim 10,
wherein the display style information stored in the display setting register is an
indication for one of wide-screen television mode, standard television mode, pan scan
display mode, and letterbox display mode,
and wherein the processing means includes:
a pan scan conversion unit for converting, when the display style information stored
in the display setting register is an indication for pan scan mode, images of the
frame data decoded by the video decoder into images with an aspect ratio of 16:9,
before trimming the converted images to give images with an aspect ratio of 4:3; and
a letterbox conversion unit for converting, when the display style information stored
in the display setting register is an indication for letterbox mode, images of the
frame data decoded by the video decoder into images with an aspect ratio of 16:9,
before adding a corrective image to the converted images to give images with an aspect
ratio of 4:3.
12. The disc reproduction apparatus of Claim 11, further including:
receiving means for receiving a user setting of display style information; and
updating means for updating the display style information in the display setting register,
when the receiving means has received a user setting of display style information.
13. A reproduction apparatus for a multimedia optical disc, wherein the multimedia optical
disc has
a stream area which includes main video data, which is an arrangement of a plurality
of sets of frame data which has been processed to enable display at an aspect ratio
specified out of a plurality of aspect ratios, and a plurality of sets of sub-picture
data, which each include a set of tel-op data and a set of coordinate information
for a display position of the set of tel-op data, and
a control area in which a plurality of sets of scenario information are recorded,
wherein each set of scenario information is composed of a set of retrieval information
showing addresses of streams recorded in the stream area, a set of selection condition
information for each set of sub-picture data, the selection condition information
showing a selection condition for selecting a set of sub-picture data which is to
be used when streams are read according to a set of retrieval information, and a set
of branch information showing a set of scenario information which should be selected
after all of the streams indicated by a present set of retrieval information have
been read,
wherein the selection condition information includes a plurality of groupings of a
logical channel number, a set of display mode information, and a set of sub-picture
indicating information, each logical channel number being used to classify a set of
sub-picture in terms of an image content of the tel-op data, each set of display mode
information showing a species of display method according to which the frame data
is to be processed for a case when the frame data decoded from the main video data
is displayed at one of the plurality of aspect ratios, and a set of sub-picture indicating
information indicating a set of sub-picture data, out of the plurality of sets of
sub-picture data included in a same stream as the main video data, by setting a pairing
of a logical channel number and the species of display method shown by the display
mode information as a selection condition,
the reproduction apparatus comprising:
an optical pickup for optically reading data from the multimedia optical disc;
a drive mechanism for driving the optical pickup;
first controlling means for controlling the drive mechanism to have the optical pickup
read data from a control area of the optical disc;
a buffer for storing a set of scenario information included in the data read according
to control by the first controlling means;
second controlling means for controlling the drive mechanism to have the optical pickup
read a stream from the optical disc;
a display setting register for storing display style information showing a species
of display method by which frame data is to be processed;
a logical channel number register for storing a setting of a logical channel number;
a video decoder for decoding main video data included in the stream read from the
optical disc into frame data;
determining means for referring to sets of selection condition information included
in the scenario information stored in the buffer and for determining sub-picture indicating
information which coincides with display style information stored in the display setting
register and coincides with a present logical channel number stored by the logical
channel number register;
a sub-picture decoder for decoding a set of sub-picture data indicated by the determined
sub-picture indicating information into a set of tel-op data, out of a plurality of
sets of sub-picture data included in the stream read according to control by the second
controlling means;
processing means for processing images of frame data, based on the display style information
stored in the display setting register; and
combining means for arranging the decoded set of tel-op data onto the processed images
of frame data in accordance with coordinate information included in a set of sub-picture
data and for combining the tel-op data and the processed images.
14. The reproduction apparatus of Claim 13,
wherein the display style information stored in the display setting register is an
indication for one of wide-screen television mode, standard television mode, pan scan
display mode, and letterbox display mode,
and wherein the processing means includes:
a pan scan conversion unit for converting, when the display style information stored
in the display setting register is an indication for pan scan mode, images of the
frame data decoded by the video decoder into images with an aspect ratio of 16:9,
before trimming the converted images to give images with an aspect ratio of 4:3; and
a letterbox conversion unit for converting, when the display style information stored
in the display setting register is an indication for letterbox mode, images of the
frame data decoded by the video decoder into images with an aspect ratio of 16:9,
before adding a corrective image to the converted images to give images with an aspect
ratio of 4:3.
15. The reproduction apparatus of Claim 14, further including:
first receiving means for receiving a user setting of display style information; and
first updating means for updating the display style information in the display setting
register, when the receiving means has received a user setting of display style information.
16. The reproduction apparatus of Claim 15, further including:
second receiving means for receiving a number input from a user; and
updating means for updating the logical channel number in the logical channel number
register, when the second receiving means has received a number input.
17. The reproduction apparatus of Claim 16, wherein the combining means includes:
a plane buffer:
a decoding unit for decoding a display position given as coordinate information which
is included in the set of sub-picture data indicated by the sub-picture indicating
information;
an arranging unit for arranging the tel-op data decoded by the sub-picture decoder
at the display position in the plane buffer decoded by the decoding unit; and
a combining unit for combining the arranged tel-op data and decoded frame data.
18. A reproduction method for reproducing streams,
wherein streams are composed of main image data which is an arrangement of frame data
which has been processed to allow display by display screens of a plurality of aspect
ratios, and sets of sub-picture data which each include a set of tel-op data and a
set of coordinate information for a display position of the set of tel-op data,
using display mode information that shows a species of display method for processing
frame data, which has been decoded from the main video data in a stream, for display
at one of the plurality of aspect ratios and sub-picture indicating information which
indicates one set of sub-picture data, out of a plurality of sets of sub-picture data
included in a same stream as the main video image, which includes coordinate information
that corresponds to the species shown by display mode information,
the reproduction method including:
a retrieving step for retrieving a plurality of combinations of display mode information
and sub-picture indicating information;
a receiving step for receiving a user indication of display style information showing
a species of display method to be used to process the frame data;
a video decoding step for decoding the main video data included in a retrieved stream
into frame data;
a determining step for referring to the plurality of sets of display mode information
retrieved in the retrieving step and for determining a set of sub-picture indicating
information which coincides with the display style information received in the receiving
step;
a sub-picture decoding step for decoding the set of sub-picture data indicated by
the set of sub-picture indicating information, out of the sets of sub-picture data
included in the retrieved stream;
a processing step for processing images of frame data based on the display style information
stored in the display setting register;
combining step for arranging the decoded set of tel-op data onto the processed images
of frame data in accordance with coordinate information included in a set of sub-picture
data and for combining the tel-op data and the processed images.